San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FATHER’S DAY, 40 YEARS OLD, BEGAN AS DAUGHTER’S TRIBUTE TO HER DAD

SPOKANE, Wash., June 17 (AP) — Sunday is the 40th anniversar­y of Father’s Day.

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To Mrs. John Bruce Dodd the widespread observance of the occasion is “beyond the broadest hopes” she had when Spokane City Council first indorsed her request for such a day in 1910.

Mrs. Dodd, a Spokane mother who still takes an active part in civic affairs, founded the “Day” as a tribute to her own devoted father.

The idea for a Father’s Day, she recalls, had its roots in a modest farm house in the rolling Big Bend hills of eastern Washington on a cold March night in the late 1890s.

It was the home of William Jackson Smart, a quiet, hardworkin­g family man who had moved west after the crops failed on his Arkansas farm.

HEARTACHE STRIKES

This night he struggled with his biggest heartache. He had just returned from his wife’s funeral and was trying to explain the

tragedy to six small children who asked when mother would be back.

From that moment Billy Smart became both mother and father to his family.

In the hard years that followed, he did his job well.

When his daughter Sonora married John Bruce Dodd, a Spokane business man, Billy Smart had reared six motherless children to adulthood.

Mrs. Dodd conceived her idea while listening to a Mother’s Day sermon in 1909 at Spokane Central Methodist Church. When it was over she went to the pastor, Dr. Henry Rasmus, and asked:

“I liked everything you said about motherhood, but don’t you think father should have a special day, too?”

PASTOR PROMISES AID

Dr. Rasmus promised to help Mrs. Dodd do something about a Father’s Day. All that year and into the next Mrs. Dodd gained local support for her idea.

The next spring she presented a petition to the Spokane Ministeria­l Society asking that sermons be preached on fatherhood sometime in June, the month of her father’s birth.

The ministers went with her to the City

Council where they got a Father’s Day proclamati­on from the mayor. Then Gov. M.E. Hay proclaimed the third Sunday in June Father’s Day in the State of Washington.

Newspaper syndicates picked up the story and gave it wide circulatio­n. At home, Mrs. Dodd worked on department store managers and asked for window displays. Most though it was a gag.

STORE SHOWS PICTURE

She did get sympatheti­c attention, however, from John Matthieson, who arranged in his store windows a picture of George Washington, the Father of our Country; an American Flag; and, a card that read simply: “Remember Father.”

When that first Father’s Day arrived on June 19, 1910, Mrs. Dodd sat in her pew at the Centenary Presbyteri­an Church here and heard Rev. Conrad Bluhm devote his sermon to Dad. He called it: “The Knighthood that Never Retreats.”

To Mrs. Dodd the title was most appropriat­e. Her own father, the inspiratio­n of her plan, had never flinched in his duties. “He lived by the Golden Rule,” she said.

DEATH TAKES HUSBAND

Billy Smart died in 1919 at the age of 77. And, although he lived to see nine of them, he never mentioned Father’s Day in the presence of his daughter.

Her husband, who helped in the early campaign for a Father’s Day, died in 1945, the day their son, an Army captain, sailed overseas.

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