Where did Mother’s day come from?
Is it just a Hallmark holiday as some say? Let’s see.
The
earliest Mother's Day celebrations may have been the spring celebrations of
ancient Greece
in honor of Rhea, the Mother of the Gods.
During
the 1600's, on the fourth Sunday of Lent, England celebrated a day honoring
the mothers of England
called "Mothering Sunday".
On
that day the wealthy would give their servants the day off, and they and were
encouraged to return home and spend the day with their mothers. They usually brought along a special cake
called a “Mothering Cake” to add a special touch to the festivities.
As Christianity spread throughout Europe , the celebration changed to honor the "Mother Church ", commemorating the belief that the
church gave them life. Over time, the church festival blended with
the Mothering Sunday celebration, and people began honoring their mothers as
well as the church.
In the United States , Julia Ward Howe (who
wrote the words to the Battle
hymn of the Republic) suggested the first Mother's Day in 1872 as a day
dedicated to peace. Every year, Ms. Howe
would hold organized Mother's Day meetings in Boston , Massachusetts .
In 1907, a woman from Philadelphia , Ana Jarvis, began a campaign to establish a national Mother's Day. Ms. Jarvis persuaded her mother's church in
Grafton, West Virginia
to celebrate Mother's Day on the second Sunday of May, the anniversary of her
mother's death. By the next year, churches
in Philadelphia
were also honoring mothers on that day.
Ms. Jarvis and her supporters started a letter
writing campaign to ministers, businessmen, and politicians in their quest to
establish a national Mother's Day. They
were amazingly successful. By 1911, almost
every state celebrated Mother's Day. President
Woodrow Wilson, in 1914, made the official announcement proclaiming Mother's
Day as a national holiday held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May, the
anniversary of Ms. Jarvis’ Mothers death.
In
1911, Joyce Hall and his brothers formed a wholesale postcard business that
they named Hall Brothers, the forerunner of Hallmark. They introduced the Pansy Card, the first
Mother’s Day card in 1939, long after the establishment of Mother’s Day. So, it seems that Mother’s Day is not a
holiday created by Hallmark to sell more cards.
I’d
like to close with a few “Motherisms” that I’ve seen on the internet.
Mother
taught me about logic….”Because I said so, that’s why!”
Mother
taught me genetics…”You’re just like your father!”
Mother
taught me about religion…”You better pray that will come
out of the carpet!”
Mother
taught me about my roots…”Shut that door. Were you born in a barn?”
Mother
taught me about anticipation….”Just wait until we
get home!”
Happy
Mother’s Day!
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