Published: May 15, 2025
This year, Armed Forces Day will be celebrated on Saturday, May 17th. It is a day to recognize the bravery and resilience of those who safeguard our freedoms and uphold peace around the world. Communities across the United States come together on this day to express their gratitude and support for the armed forces through events, ceremonies, and parades.
Image: Dignitaries with President Harry S. Truman on the reviewing stand during the Armed Forces Day parade. From left to right: Secretary of the Army Frank Pace, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson, President Truman, and Admiral William Leahy. In the center in the second row is Attorney General J. Howard McGrath. All others are unidentified. May 20, 1950. Credit: Abbie Rowe National Park Service,
Harry S. Truman Library & Museum, Accession Number 73-3364
July 26, 1947 – President Harry S. Truman signed the National Security Act into law (Statute Compilation*, codified in Title 50 of the U.S. Code: War and National Defense). This Act unified the four branches of the military under a single executive authority, the Secretary of Defense. This decision led to the creation of the National Military Establishment.
August 31, 1949 – "In an effort to reinforce the unification of the six U.S. military branches under one central agency, U.S. Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson announced the creation of Armed Forces Day." (Source: U.S. Army) . Some branches maintain their own celebrations in addition to the joint observance. Read remarks from Senator Lodge on Secretary Johnson's announcement as printed in the Congressional Record on April 7, 1949.
February 27, 1950 – The first Armed Forces Day was proclaimed by Presidential Proclamation 2873, but it was not observed until May that year. President Truman declared, "Armed Forces Day, Saturday, May 20, 1950, marks the first combined demonstration by America's defense team of its progress, under the National Security Act, towards the goal of readiness for any eventuality. It is the first formal procession of preparedness by the unified forces of our land, sea, and air defense."
May 20, 1950 – Armed Forces Day is first celebrated.
March 18, 1961 – President John F. Kennedy signed Presidential Proclamation 3399 (75 Stat. 1038) officially declaring Armed Forces Day a national holiday on every third Saturday in May.
*Asterisk indicates link to a Statute Compilation. This is a compilation of the public law, as amended, is an unofficial document and should not be cited as legal evidence of the law. Learn more.