by
Wendy McElroy
Modern Father's Day is uniquely American in its history. Together with
Mother's Day, it is both a public and personal expression of the gratitude
that is due to all caring parents.
Why, then, has Mother's Day been a national holiday for almost a
century, while Father's Day received that recognition only decades
ago?
The proposals for a Father's Day and Mother's Day -- for time set
aside for children to honor their parents -- was introduced to American
culture at about the same time. (Mother's Day was originally suggested
in 1872 by Julia Ward Howe, author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic,"
but she envisioned it as a day for women
to protest against war.) The first celebration of Father's Day
occurred in Spokane, Wash., on June 19, 1910. This was two years after
the schoolteacher Anna
M. Jarvis began campaigning from Philadelphia to establish a nationwide
Mother's Day.
Sonora
Louise Smart Dodd conceived the idea for Father's Day in 1909
while listening to a sermon endorsing the concept of a Mother's Day.
Dodd's father, William Jackson Smart, had raised six children by himself
after his wife died in childbirth. So strong was her desire to honor
his strength of character and devotion that Father's Day was intended
to fall on his birthday, June 5, but it had to be postponed. A following
Sunday was chosen because Dodd's vision of Father's Day included a
religious
service dedicated to fathers during which they would receive small
gifts from their children.
Roses were chosen as the official flower of the first Father's Day,
with white flowers to remember fathers who had died and red ones to
honor the living. (That tradition persists.) Both the mayor of Spokane
and the governor of Washington quickly endorsed Father's Day. In that
same year, 1910, West Virginia became the first state to proclaim
a Mother's Day. By 1911, however, almost every state embraced that
celebration. In 1913, in the wake of a unanimous resolution from the
House of Representatives that requested government officials wear
white carnations on Mother's Day, President Woodrow Wilson declared,
"the second Sunday in May as a public expression of our love and reverence
for the mothers of our country."
Mother's Day was a national holiday, but despite support from newspapers
and from prominent political figures, Father's Day did not gain similar
momentum. A number of independent 'reinventions' of the idea attested
to its popular appeal, however. For example, Harry C. Meek, a president
of Chicago's Lions Club, is sometimes called the "Originator of Father's
Day" because of his vigorous support for the idea that dated from
the 1920s.
In an amazing co-incidence, Meek chose June 20 as Father's Day, probably
because that date was his birthday.
If it was popular, why were lobbying attempts to formalize Father's
Day unsuccessful? The inertia was not due to lack of sympathy. In
1916, President Woodrow Wilson observed a private Father's Day with
his family. In 1924, President Calvin Coolidge signed a Father's Day
resolution to "establish more intimate relations between fathers and
their children and to impress upon fathers the full measure of their
obligations."
Coolidge recommended "the widespread observance" of Father's Day
but he did not declare it a national holiday, as Wilson had done with
Mother's Day. That recognition would take almost five decades. Meanwhile,
Father's Day continued to be widely celebrated without being formalized.
A plausible theory of why the two observances were treated differently
is that members of the House of Representatives thought that granting
recognition to mothers was gallant but giving the same nod to their
own sex looked self-serving. A more disturbing theory is that, even
then, the role of fatherhood was undervalued. Indeed, it may have
been seen as a slight to mothers and, so, politically unwise to treat
the two parents as equivalently important.
Whatever the reason, the path to establishing Father's Day as a permanent
national holiday was arduous. In 1926, a National Father's Day Committee
was formed in New York City, but it was not until 1956 that the next
significant step forward occurred: Father's Day was recognized by
a joint resolution of Congress.
The next year, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith made an impassioned appeal
for Congress to take the next step and formalize Father's Day. Smith
wrote: "The Congress has been guilty now for forty years of the worst
possible oversight ... against the gallant fathers ... of our land.
... Either we honor both our parents, mother and father, or let us
desist from honoring either one ... But to single out just one of
our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable."
The "grievous" insult continued until 1966 when President Lyndon
Johnson signed a presidential proclamation declaring that the third
Sunday of June 1966 would be recognized as Father's Day. It would
take six more years before President Richard Nixon established Father's
Day as a permanent national holiday to be observed on the third Sunday
of June every year.
America should be richly applauded for pioneering a day on which
families recognize fathers. And, if Father's Day took longer to receive
the public acknowledgement it deserved, perhaps this can be a reminder
of how easy it is, even for those with good intentions, to overlook
the importance of fatherhood.
Wendy McElroy
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Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com.
She is the author and editor of many books and articles, including her
new anthology Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband
in Canada. Other articles by Wendy McElroy
can be found in the MensNewsDaily.com archive.