Navy Day
Several nations observe or have observed a Navy Day to recognize their navy.
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Australia
The Royal Australian Navy celebrates Navy Day in March.
Chile
In Chile, the Día de las Glorias Navales is on May 21, Commemorates the Iquique Naval Combat, in may 21 1879 during the Pacific War. The date also marks the opening of ordinary Parlamentary season (throw september 18, Independence Day) and is the traditional day for the President´s State of the Nation adress. Principal civic acts are performed in Santiago de Chile, Iquique and Valparaiso where National Congress is located since restablishment in 1990 after General Pinochet´s dictatorship.
Russia
In Russia, Navy Day is a national holiday that normally takes place on the last Sunday in July.
United States
In the United States, the Navy League of the United States organized the first Navy Day in 1922, holding it on October 27 because it was the birthday of the Navy-supporting President Theodore Roosevelt. Although meeting with mixed reviews the first year, in 1923 over 50 major cities participated, and the United States Navy sent a number of its ships to various port cities for the occasion. The 1945 Navy Day was an especially large celebration, with President Harry S. Truman reviewing the fleet in New York Harbor.
In 1949, Louis A. Johnson, secretary of the newly-created Department of Defense, directed that the US Navy's participation occur on Armed Forces Day in May, although as a civilian organization the Navy League was not affected by this directive, and continued to organize navy Day celebrations as before. In the 1970s, the "birthday" of the Continental Navy was found to be October 13, 1775, and so CNO Admiral Elmo R. Zumwalt worked with the Navy League to define that as the new date of Navy Day. Navy Day continues to be celebrated as of 2004.