In today's world, Father's Day seems like a tradition that has been
around forever. The truth of the matter is, however, that Father's
Day is a relatively new institution, which became an official holiday
only 29 years ago.
While there is a discrepancy over who was actually the originator of
the holiday, both people who are credited with the earliest Father's
Day celebrations were women. While some feel that the first Father's
Day observance was planned by Mrs. Charles Clayton of West Virginia
in 1908, popular opinion credits Sonora Smart Dodd, of Spokane,
Washington with the idea.
Sonora Smart Dodd had lost her mother during the birth of her sixth
child. For twenty-one years her father, William Jackson Smart,
raised his six children on his own, making all the parental sacrifices
that come with raising a family. To Sonora, her father was the
perfect example of a selfless, loving, courageous man.
In 1909, while listening intently to a Mother's Day sermon extolling
the virtues of motherhood, Sonora longed for a way to honor her
father for all he had done for her and her siblings. It is then that she
came up with the idea of holding a Father's Day celebration to honor
fathers everywhere.
Mrs. Dodd was able to gain support for a local Father's Day
celebration from the town's ministers and members of the local
Y.M.C.A. The date suggested for the first Father's Day was June 5,
1910, William Smart's birthday. However, because of the time
needed to prepare for the celebration, the date of the first Father's
Day celebration was moved to June 19, the third Sunday in June.
The rose was selected as the flower to be worn in Father's Day
celebrations; the red rose for those whose father was living and the
white rose for those whose father had passed away.
Newspapers across the country that were endorsing Mother's Day
carried stories of the Father's Day observance in Spokane. Interest in
Father's Day increased and local observances popped up across the
nation. The state of Washington made Father's Day an official
holiday that same year.
Though the holiday was popular as a local celebration in many
communities, it wasn't readily accepted nationally. In 1912, J.H.
Berringer, of Washington conducted a Father's Day service,
choosing to wear a white lilac as the Father's Day flower. In 1915,
Henry Meek, president of the Lions Club of Chicago also began
promoting Father's Day celebrations. He gave several speeches
around the United States supporting Father's Day and in 1920 the
Lions Clubs of America presented him with a gold watch with the
inscription "Originator of Father's Day".
Many famous people supported Father's Day and attempted to secure
official recognition for the holiday including William Jennings
Bryan, Woodrow Wilson, and Calvin Coolidge. In 1916 President
Wilson observed the holiday with his own family and in 1924
President Coolidge gave his support to states wishing to hold their
own Father's Day observances believing that widespread observance
of the holiday would draw families closer together. In 1957 Senator
Margaret Chase Smith lobbied Congress for a national Father's Day,
but it wasn't until 1966 that President Lyndon Johnson signed a
presidential proclamation declaring the 3rd Sunday of June as
Father's Day. In 1972, President Richard Nixon established a
permanent national observance of Father's Day to be held on the 3rd
Sunday of June.
Today, Father's Day is celebrated across the globe. While it is not as
widely celebrated as Mother's Day, Father's Day is the fifth-largest
card-sending occasion in America, with over 85 million greeting
cards exchanged.
About the Author
Patricia Chadwick is a freelance writer and has been a stay-at-home
mom for 15 years. She is currently a columnist in several online
publications as well as editor of two newsletters. Parents & Teens is
a twice-monthly newsletter geared to help parents connect with their
teens. Subscribe at www.parentsandteens.com. History's Women is
weekly online magazine highlighting the extraordinary achievements
of women. Subscribe at www.historyswomen.com/subscribe.html.