Father’s Day (HISTORY)
17th June (Sunday) 2012
Father's Day is a celebration of
fathers inaugurated in the early twentieth century to complement Mother's Day in celebrating fatherhood and male parenting.
After the success obtained by Anna
Jarvis with the promotion of Mother's Day in the US, some wanted to create a
similar holidays for other family members, and Father's Day was the choice most
likely to succeed. There were other persons in the US who independently thought
of "Father's Day",but the credit for the modern holiday is always
given to Sonora Dodd.
Father's Day was founded in 1910 by Sonora Smart Dodd, born in Arkansas from Spokane, who was also the driving force behind
its establishment.Its first celebration was in Spokane, Washington
on June 19, 1910. Her father, the Civil War
veteran William Jackson Smart,
was a single parent who reared his six children in Spokane, Washington.
After hearing a sermon about Jarvis' Mother's Day in 1909, she told her pastor
that fathers should have a similar holiday honoring them. Although she initially
suggested June 5, her father's birthday, the pastors hadn't enough time to
prepare their sermons, and the celebration was deferred to the third Sunday of
June.
It did not have much success
initially. In the 1920s, Dodd stopped promoting the celebration because she was
studying in the Art Institute of
Chicago, and it faded into relative obscurity, even in Spokane. In
the 1930s Dodd returned to Spokane and started promoting the celebration again,
raising awareness at a national level. She had the help of those trade groups
that would benefit most from the holiday, for example the manufacturers of
ties, tobacco pipes, and any traditional present to fathers.Since 1938 she had
the help of the Father's Day Council, founded by the New York Associated Men's Wear Retailers to consolidate
and systematize the commercial promotion. Americans resisted the holiday during
a few decades, perceiving it as just an attempt by merchants to replicate the
commercial success of Mother's Day, and newspapers frequently featured cynical
and sarcastic attacks and jokes. But the trade groups didn't give up: they kept
promoting it and even incorporated the jokes into their adverts, and they eventually
succeeded. By the mid 1980s the Father's Council wrote that [Father's Day] has
become a 'Second Christmas' for all the men's gift-oriented industries.
A bill to accord national
recognition of the holiday was introduced in Congress in 1913 In 1916,
President Woodrow Wilson went
to Spokane to speak in a Father's Day celebration and wanted to make it
official, but Congress resisted, fearing that it would become commercialized.
US President Calvin Coolidge
recommended in 1924 that the day be observed by the nation, but stopped short
of issuing a national proclamation. Two earlier attempts to formally recognize
the holiday had been defeated by Congress. In 1957, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith
wrote a proposal accusing Congress of ignoring fathers for 40 years while
honoring mothers, thus "[singling] out just one of our two parents".In
1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson
issued the first presidential proclamation honoring fathers, designating the
third Sunday in June as Father's Day. Six years later, the day was made a
permanent national holiday when President Richard Nixon signed it into law in 1972.
In addition to Father's Day, International Men's
Day is celebrated in many countries on November 19 for men and boys
who are fathers.
Similar
celebrations
A "Father's Day" service
was held on July 5, 1908, in Fairmont, West
Virginia, in the Williams Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church South,
now known as Central United Methodist
Church. Grace Golden Clayton was mourning the loss of her father when, on
December 1907, the Monongah Mining
Disaster in nearby Monongah killed
361 men, 250 of them fathers, leaving around a thousand fatherless children.
Clayton suggested her pastor Robert Thomas Webb to honor all those fathers.
Clayton chose the Sunday nearest to the birthday of her father, Methodist
minister Fletcher Golden.
Clayton's event did not have
repercussions outside of Fairmont for several reasons, among them: the city was
overwhelmed by other events, the celebration was never promoted outside of the
town itself and no proclamation was made in the City Council. Also two events
overshadowed this event: the celebration of Independence
Day July 4, 1908, with 12,000 attendants and several shows including
a hot air balloon event, which took over the headlines in the following days,
and the death of a 16-year-old girl on July 4. The local church and Council
were overwhelmed and they didn't even think of promoting the event, and it
wasn't celebrated again for many years. The original sermon was not reproduced
in press and it was lost. Finally, Clayton was a quiet person, who never
promoted the event or even talked to other persons about it.
In 1911 Jane Addams proposed a city-wide Father's Day in
Chicago, but she was turned down.
In 1912 there was a Father's Day celebration
in Vancouver, Washington,
suggested by Methodist pastor J. J. Berringer of the Irvingtom Methodist
Church. They believed mistakenly that they had been the first to celebrate such
a day. They followed a 1911 suggestion by the Portland Oregonian.
Harry C. Meek, member of Lions Clubs International
who helped to promote the holiday, claimed that he had first the idea for
Father's Day in 1915He claims that the third Sunday of June was chosen because
it was his birthday (it would have been more natural to choose his father's
birthday).The Lions Club has named him "Originator of Father's Day"