The Hometown Treasure May 2013 | Page 49

Mother’s Day is born By Harold D. Gingerich For the record, Mother’s Day was not the invention of Hallmark Cards. Tributes to motherhood date back to ancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans whose celebrations honored their feminine deities. Sixteenth century Christians in England chose the fourth Sunday of Lent to honor the Virgin Mary, mother of Christ. North America points to the Civil War and women like Anna Jarvis and Julia Ward Howe for origins of what we know as Mother’s Day. Julia Ward Howe, who penned The Battle Hymn of the Republic, championed the efforts for a national Mother’s Day Proclamation in 1870. Disillusioned by the carnage of the Civil War, her passionate poem, Mothers Day Proclamation, called on mothers to protest the f utility of their sons killing the sons of other mothers. She proposed converting July 4 to Mother’s Day, but when that failed, June 2 was chosen. By 1873, groups in 18 cities observed Howe’s new holiday. Initially Howe financed most of the expenses, but once her money stopped so did the observances. However, a seed had been planted. Bostonians continued to celebrate for more than 10 years. It would be Anna Jarvis, never a mother herself, who took up the cause and came to be known as the “Moth- er of Mother’s Day”. Her mother, Anna Marie Reeves Jarvis, was Anna’s inspiration. Throughout the Civil War “Mother Jarvis” organized women’s brigades, asking workers to do all they could without regard to North or South. In 1878, Anna (age 12) heard her mother say, while teaching a Sunday School lesson on mothers of the Bible, “I hope and pray that someone, sometime, will found a memorial mother’s day… There are many days for men, but none for mothers.” Mother Jarvis died on May 9, 1905. At the graveside service, Anna’s brother Claude overheard Anna say, “By the grace of God, you shall have that Mothers Day”. Jarvis, embarking on a tireless campaign, sent a stream of letters to prominent national leaders including Presidents William Taft and Theodore Roosevelt. In 1907, Anna led a tribute on the second Sunday of May at Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton, West Virginia, where Mother Jarvis had taught. Anna handed out her mother’s favorite flower, the white carnation, to symbolize the purity of a mother’s love. The custom spread to churches in 45 states, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Mexico and Canada. Mother’s Day was proclaimed by the Governor of West Virginia in 1912, and the following year by the Governor of Pennsylvania. In 1913, President Woodrow Wilson signed a Congressional Resolution proclaiming the second Sunday of May as Mother’s Day. Because of commercialization, specifically the sale of flowers, Jarvis sued to stop a Mother’s Day event in 1923. The Florist Review admitted in print that, “This was a holiday that could be exploited.” In the 1930s Anna was arrested for protesting the sale of flowers at the American War Mothers group. She petitioned against a postage stamp featuring her mother with a vase of white carnations and the words “Mothers Day”. She was able to get the wording removed, but the flowers stayed. In 1938, Jarvis attempted unsuccessfully to copyright “Mother’s Day”. Flower sales grew - white for mothers who had died, red for those still living. One last twist of irony - Anna Jarvis died in 1948 - blind, poor and childless. Anna never knew it was The Florist Exchange that had anonymously been paying for her care. Happy Mother’s Day! The Hometown Treasure · May ‘13 · pg 47