Mother of Mother's Day, Anna Jarvis |
The
celebration of Mother’s Day as we
know now is generally credited to Anna Marie Jarvis in
memory of her mother, who died on May 9, 1905.
The first commemorative service was held at the Methodist Church in Grafton,
West Virginia where Jarvis’s mother had been aa Sunday school teacher 106
years ago on May 12, 1907.
The following year on May 10 the church, at Jarvis’s urging,
expanded the service to include honoring all mothers and Jarvis’s friend, Philadelphia merchant prince John Wanamaker conducted a public
observance in the auditorium of this store.
Jarvis tirelessly dedicated herself to spreading the
observance. She wrote articles and
pamphlets, lobbied city councils, state legislatures, and Congress for proclamations establishing an official observance.
West Virginia was the first to act, in 1910, followed by several other states
over the next years.
Jarvis’s efforts paid off when Congress on May 8, 1914 established
the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day and requesting the President issue a proclamation. Woodrow Wilson wasted no time, issuing
his proclamation the next day, May 9 making this the official “birthday” of the
Federal observance.
Wilson’s proclamation directed Americans to show the flag in honor of mothers who had lost sons in
war. That part of the declaration is an
indication that Wilson was probably aware of the earlier efforts of Julia Ward Howe to establish a Mother’s
Day observance to protest war.
Ward’s moving Mother’s Day
Proclamation was written in 1870 in reaction to the carnage of the Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War and called for women across the globe to unite
to end war. Although that noble effort
never produced either the movement or the observation that Howe had hoped for,
the effort was well known. When Howe
died only four years earlier full of honors as the writer of the Battle
Hymn of the Republic and one of the most famous American woman of
letters, her obituaries revived interest in her effort, particularly among
pacifists.
In recent years the memory Howe’s Proclamation has been revived by
the peace and feminist movements and by her Unitarian Universalist faith community and has been re-connected to
Jarvis’s celebration.
By
the mid-1920’s Jarvis and her sister became embittered at the commercialization
of the holiday they worked so hard to create.
The sisters spent the rest of their lives and all of their inheritance
battling that trend. They trademarked
the names Mother’s Day and Second Sunday in May to try and keep merchants from
using them. But there we too many fires
to put out and not enough lawyers in the world to stamp out flagrant
infringement. At least once she was
arrested for protesting.
Merchants,
and especially the greeting card manufacturers
that Jarvis particularly loathed, actually organized and launched a counter
attack portraying her as demented and obsessed.
They even questioned her patriotism.
Since newspapers profited handsomely from Mother’s Day advertising, they
were more than happy to abet the smear campaign.
Jarvis
and her sister spent their last dime in the fight and were reduced to abject
poverty. Anna never married or had children
of her own. Mother’s Day was her child
and she fought fiercely to the end to defend its honor.
She
died in West Chester, Pennsylvania in 1948 at the age of 84
in obscurity.
Ironically,
many of the same merchants and business interests that had once vilified her
later found it useful to enshrine her in legend, taking great care that her
distaste for what the observance had become was carefully omitted from their
new version of the founding myth—along with any mention of Julia Ward Howe’s
earlier effort.
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