the United States

Quick answer

When is St. Patrick's Day 1955?

Thursday, March 17, 1955

Relative to today: 25987 days ago.

St. Patrick's Day 1955 is Thursday, March 17, 1955. St. Patrick's Day is observed on March 17, so the date is fixed while the weekday changes each year. Check local schedules for schools, events, employers, and travel plans.

Not a U.S. federal public holiday. See all U.S. public holidays for a full 1955 list.

Exact date

Thursday, March 17, 1955

Calendar rule

St. Patrick's Day is observed on March 17, so the date is fixed while the weekday changes each year.

Holiday status

Not a U.S. federal public holiday

St. Patrick's Day is a cultural observance in the United States, but it is not a federal public holiday.

What St. Patrick's Day means in the United States

St. Patricks Day is part of the U.S. calendar vocabulary people search for by year because the practical question is not only the name of the day, but the exact weekday and date. Use the date line above as the answer first: it is the part that matters for travel, school schedules, family plans, payroll cutoffs, event promotion, and calendar subscriptions.

For U.S. planning, always separate three ideas: the calendar date, the federal holiday status, and the local closure pattern. A date can be culturally important without being a federal public holiday, and a federal holiday can still have exceptions for private employers, hospitals, retail, transportation, and emergency services. That is why this page links the exact date to month and year calendar views instead of treating the name alone as enough.

If you are using this page for work, compare the date against your employer handbook, school district calendar, bank holiday list, carrier service alerts, or event venue schedule. If you are using it for family planning, add the date to a subscribed calendar rather than typing it once into a note, because year-specific pages are easiest to forget when the next year rolls around.

At a glance

  • Use the first date line as the direct answer for year-specific searches.
  • Check federal status separately from school, bank, employer, and local closures.
  • Open the related month calendar when the surrounding week matters.
  • Use the multi-year table for travel, campaigns, and recurring events.

Practical planning

  1. Confirm the date against any institution that can set its own closure calendar.
  2. For travel or shipping, check cutoff dates around the holiday week, not only the day itself.
  3. If the day affects a campaign or event, include both the weekday and the month-day in copy.
  4. Subscribe or print the matching calendar if you need the date beyond a one-time lookup.

How 1955 compares to 1954

In 1954, the date was Wednesday, March 17, 1954. In 1955, the date is Thursday, March 17, 1955. The month and day stay the same, but the weekday changes as the calendar advances. The gap is 365 day(s) later year over year, which reflects whether the prior year included a leap day. Use the weekday, not only the fixed date, when you compare school schedules, shipping cutoffs, event hours, or travel plans.

Last year: Wednesday, March 17, 1954 · This page: Thursday, March 17, 1955

Weekends, time off, and scheduling

Long weekends, substitute days, and school make-up days vary. Use the exact date with your employer, school, or state calendar when planning travel and time off.

When St. Patrick's Day falls (multi-year)

Exact calendar dates and weekdays—useful for st. patrick's day 2024–1962 search intent.

Year and date for St. Patrick's Day
YearDateWeekday
1953Mar 17Tuesday
1954Mar 17Wednesday
1955 this pageMar 17Thursday
1956Mar 17Saturday
1957Mar 17Sunday
1958Mar 17Monday
1959Mar 17Tuesday
1960Mar 17Thursday
1961Mar 17Friday
1962Mar 17Saturday

Questions about St. Patrick's Day 1955

When is St. Patrick's Day 1955, exactly?

St. Patrick's Day in 1955 is Thursday, March 17, 1955 (use your local time zone for same-day events). The date on the calendar is fixed by the U.S. rule in our guide, not a guess. If you need a single ISO-style line for travel systems, the date is 1955-03-17.

Why does St. Patrick's Day land on that Thursday in 1955?

St. Patrick's Day is observed on March 17, so the date is fixed while the weekday changes each year. For fixed-date observances, the weekday is the part that changes from year to year. That weekday is often what determines school events, shipping deadlines, restaurant demand, travel timing, or whether a weekend observed closure applies.

How does the 1955 date compare to 1954?

In 1954, the date was Wednesday, March 17, 1954. In 1955, the date is Thursday, March 17, 1955. The month and day stay the same, but the weekday changes as the calendar advances. The gap is 365 day(s) later year over year, which reflects whether the prior year included a leap day. Use the weekday, not only the fixed date, when you compare school schedules, shipping cutoffs, event hours, or travel plans.

Is St. Patrick's Day 1955 a U.S. federal public holiday, and do banks and post offices close?

This date is not a universal “everyone is off work” U.S. federal public holiday in the same way as, for example, New Year’s Day. St. Patrick's Day is a cultural observance in the United States, but it is not a federal public holiday. If you are checking “open or closed” for a specific place, use that organization’s own holiday list rather than a generic U.S. label alone.

What about St. Patrick's Day in 1956—and how should I use the multi-year table?

In 1956, St. Patrick's Day is Saturday, March 17, 1956. The table on this page is meant for multi-year search intent: you can line up several years at once to see when the same observance will fall near a trip, a budget cycle, or a school year boundary. For subscription calendars, also open the year view in AnyCalendar to catch adjacent holidays.

Where can I see this day on a full U.S. holiday list and in my own calendar?

The United States public-holiday list for 1955 (with long-weekend notes) is on anycalendar.org/holidays/us. You can also open the march 1955 month view, the full 1955 year view, and use the subscribe and print tools on AnyCalendar to move these dates into Google, Apple, Outlook, or a PDF you can print.