The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ADAYFORDAD

The first Father’s Day was observed 110 years ago. Here’s how a daughter from Spokane, Wash., sold area residents on the idea and then took Father’s Day national:

- By Charles Apple | THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW

DEC. 6, 1907

A explosion in a coal mine in Monongah, West Virginia, kills 362 miners. Two hundred and fifty of them are fathers who leave behind about a thousand fatherless children.

JULY 5, 1908

One of those children, Grace Golden Clayton, suggests to her pastor — Robert T. Webb of Williams Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church South in Fairmont, West Virginia — that they hold a special memorial service for those fathers. A memorial is held — but it’s local and it’s a one-time event.

May 9, 1909

While listening to a Mother’s Day sermon, Sonora Smart Dodd of Spokane, Washington, has the idea of having a similar day to

honor fathers. Her own father, William Jackson Smart, was a Civil War veteran and a widower who raised her and her five younger brothers after her mother died in childbirth with the fifth brother. Sonora was just 16 when that happened. Dodd works with area ministers, merchants and the YMCA to make her proposal happen. Dodd suggests June 5 — her father’s birthday — but that gets pushed back to the third Sunday in June.

June 19, 1910

The first Father’s Day is observed in Spokane. Dodd delivers gifts to handicappe­d fathers. Boys from the YMCA wear roses on their lapels — red for those with living fathers and white for deceased. Special sermons on fatherhood are presented in Presbyteri­an and Methodist churches in Spokane. The day is observed throughout the state of Washington, thanks to a proclamati­on by Gov. M.E. Hay.

1911

Social worker Jane Addams proposes a citywide Father’s Day in Chicago, but city officials vote down the idea.

1912

Rev. J.H. Berringer of Irvington Methodist Church in Vancouver, Washington, holds a Father’s Day celebratio­n. The church is under the impression this was the first such day to honor fathers.

1913

A bill to introduce a national Father’s Day holiday is introduced in Congress by Rep. J. Hampton Moore of Pennsylvan­ia. Moore introduces the bill at the suggestion of Charlotte Kirkbride and Carrie Sternberg of Philadelph­ia, who had worked to have Father’s Day observed “in many parts of the country” that June, the New York Times reports.

1914

President Woodrow Wilson approves a resolution that makes Mother’s Day an official celebratio­n, six years after it was proposed.

1915

Harry C. Meek of Lions Club Internatio­nal organizes a Father’s Day celebratio­n on the third Sunday of June: his birthday. His organizati­on, too, believes this is the first such celebratio­n and will honor him as the originator of Father’s Day. Over the years, Meek will make several attempts to push his celebratio­n nationwide.

1916

President Wilson honors Spokane’s Father’s Day celebratio­n by using a special telegraph key set up on his desk at the White House that unfurls a flag in Spokane. He tries to make Father’s Day an official nationwide celebratio­n, but Congress resists, fearing it would become too commercial­ized — which was already happening with Mother’s Day.

1920s

Dodd stops promoting her Father’s Day celebratio­n while she’s studying at the Art Institute of Chicago.

1921

The Governor of Virginia proclaims a Father’s Day, at the request of Mrs. Walter H. Burgess.

1924

President Calvin Coolidge — acting at the urging of Meek — recommends Father’s Day be

observed nationwide but declines to make it a national proclamati­on. His resolution is “to establish more intimate relations between fathers and their children and to impress upon fathers the full measure of their obligation­s.”

1930s

Dodd returns to Spokane and picks up again promoting a Father’s Day celebratio­n. She’s aided by national trade groups that would benefit from a gift-giving holiday: tie and hat makers, tobacco shops and so on.

1932

Burgess registers “National Father’s Day Associatio­n” with the U.S. Patent Office. She reportedly drops any claims to establishi­ng Father’s Day when she learns of Dodd’s efforts.

1936

Dodd receives support from the New York Associated Men’s Wear Retailers, who form a Father’s Day Committee to promote an annual celebratio­n.

1942

The Father’s Day Committee begins selecting an annual Father of the Year, based on “outstandin­g

achievemen­t.” Among the winners: Dr. Ralph Bunche, Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Presidents Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

1952

Dodd’s son is named “ideal father of 1952” by the Washington Post.

1957

Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine proposes a national Father’s Day holiday, chastising Congress for honoring mothers but not fathers. “To single out just one of our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable,” Smith writes.

1961

Rep. Walt Horan brings up the topic once again in the House, saying “Father’s Day has gained nationwide observance but it has never been given the official recognitio­n of Congress.”

1966

President Lyndon B. Johnson issues an executive order designatin­g the third Sunday in June as Father’s Day.

1970

Congress passes Joint Resolution 187, which calls on U.S. citizens on Father’s Day to “offer public and private expression­s of such day to the abiding love and gratitude which they bear for their fathers.”

1972

President Richard Nixon signs Joint Resolution 187 into law.

1978

Dodd dies at age 96.

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Sonora Smart Dodd

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