A Brief History of Mother’s Day!



Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia campaigned for the holiday on behalf of her mother who was unhappy about the hatred that evolved during the Civil War. Her mother believed that a great healing between the North and South would occur if soldiers honored their mothers on a special day that would make them forget about the war. Anna and her supporters wrote thousands of letters to businessmen, politicians, and clergymen, seeking their help in establishing the holiday.

Anna persuaded her mother's church to celebrate the holiday on the anniversary of her mother's death, the 2nd Sunday in May. Within just two short years, the day was celebrated in nearly every state in the U.S. Ultimately, President Woodrow Wilson officially recognized Mother’s Day in 1914, and today it’s celebrated throughout the world.

End of story? Not quite. Upset that the holiday had become too commercialized, Anna filed a lawsuit in 1923 to stop a Mother's Day festival. She was later arrested for disturbing the peace at a Mother's Day convention where she was outraged to find vendors profiting from the sale of white carnations, which she had designated as the official symbol of mothers. Anna never married... never had any children... and eventually admitted to being sorry she ever started the holiday because she wanted it to be an expression of sentiment, not a vehicle for profit.

Today, many people still follow the tradition of wearing a carnation on Mother's Day. A colored carnation means that a person's mother is living, while a white carnation honors a mother who has passed away.

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