Mother's Day U.S.

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The bond between mother and child is remembered on Mother's Day.

Mother's Day is celebrated the second Sunday to honor mothers throughout America. The holiday was formally declared after Congress passed legislation May 8, 1914, and requesting a proclamation declaring this date a national holiday. President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation on May 9, 1914, declaring the first national holiday. It was requested that American citizens fly the American flag to honor those mothers who lost sons in war action.[1]

Origins

Mother's Day was started by women's peace groups after the Civil War. Women from both sides of the Civil War gathered together to honor the sons they lost during the war. Several Mother's Day observances were held between the 1870s and 1880s all at the local level. By 1868 Ann Jarvis created a committee to establish a "Mother's Friendship Day" to reunite families divided by the Civil War. She died in 1905 before seeing the holiday become implemented by Wilson. Her daughter, also known as Ann Jarvis, took up her mother's cause and with the help of a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania merchant, John Wanamaker, a Mother's Day service was held at Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, West Virginia. The service was held on May 9, 1907, at the church where her mother at taught Sunday School. The first "official" Mother's Day service was held May 10, 1908, at Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Church. A larger ceremony in the Wanamaker Auditorium in the Wanamaker's store in Philadelphia on the same date.[2]

Reference

  1. The Library of Congress American Memory Today in History (2011-05-11). Retrieved on 2011-05-11.
  2. Joseph, Hawes; Elizabeth Shores (2011-05-11). Google Books The Family in America, Vol 1, ISBN 13: 978-1576072325. ABC-CLIO; 2 volume edition (December 1, 2001). Retrieved on 2011-05-11.