All Saints' Day
November 1st is All Saints Day.All Saints' Day is also known as All Hallows Tide, All-Hallowmas, or All Hallows' Day, and it's celebrated in many areas of the United States, especially where there are largely Roman Catholic populations.
Day After Halloween-
All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day are also closely linked with Halloween, which is a short for the name “All Hallows' Eve”.
This holiday is celebrated in different ways.
In New Orleans, for example, people gather in local cemeteries and decorate the graves with flowers. The descendants of French Canadian settlers around St Martinsville, Louisiana, observe this day in the traditional French manner by laying wreaths and bouquets and lighting candles on even the most obscure graves.
In the United Methodist Church, All Saints' Day is observed on the first Sunday in November to remember deceased members of the local church congregation. A candle is lit as each person's name is called out, followed by a prayer offered for each soul.
Many Latin American communities in the United States hold celebrations around November 1 and 2, linking with All Saints’ Day and All Souls' Day (November 2). These celebrations are part of the Day of the Dead, also known as Día de los Muertos.
All Saints’ Day is not a federal public holiday in the United States.