Origin of Father’s Day

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June 19, 1910 • A Day for Father.

by the Staff or associates of Christian History Institute.
© Copyright. All rights reserved.

Many of our most important national anniversaries have Christian roots. This is obviously true of such days as Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. It is also less obviously true of Halloween (Hallowed Evening) which once was closely linked to All Soul’s Day. Father’s Day, too, has Christian roots.

The first widely promoted Father’s Day celebration was held in Spokane on this day, June 19, 1910. Louise Dodd envisioned the event as focused in special religious services and involving small gifts as well as loving greetings from children to their fathers. She brought up the matter with her pastor and he communicated the idea to the local pastor’s association. The mayor of the city and the governor of the state endorsed her concept and issued proclamations in support. Even the famed politician William Jennings Bryan weighed in with words of support. The third Sunday in June was established as the date of the celebration.

Mrs. Dodd dearly loved her own father. When his wife died in childbirth, he was left with six children. Somehow he overcame the difficulties of rearing them and operating his farm. His devotion to his children sparked Louise’s inspiration.

Father’s day was slow to catch on. What Louise had done was not even well known in her own state despite the governor’s proclamation. The idea of honoring fathers with a special day was actually reinvented independently in several other places, each locality thinking it was starting something new. Curiously, circumstances led other founders to independently choose the month of June. By 1916 President Woodrow Wilson had endorsed the idea and in 1924 Calvin Coolidge recommended national observance of the day “to impress upon fathers the full measure of their obligation” and strengthen intimate ties between fathers and children.

The ideals of fatherhood are strong in the Bible. Unlike the gods of other religions, the Judeo-Christian God is portrayed as a loving Father. Christ declared God his own intimate Father and claimed to show in himself what the Father was like. God gave his beloved son for the salvation of the world. Consequently, wherever the Christian ideal has prospered, fatherhood has often taken on deeper and more lyrical meaning. The tender appeals of the apostles John and Paul to their “children” helped foster this attitude.

One man’s self-sacrificing love for his children led to a national day of recognition for all fathers. We have a grateful daughter to thank for that.

Comments (6)

EyebeeNo GravatarApril 3rd, 2005 at 21:52

This is very interesting.

EyebeeNo GravatarApril 3rd, 2005 at 16:52

This is very interesting.

KatNo GravatarApril 17th, 2005 at 03:29

I thought so too! 😀

KatNo GravatarApril 16th, 2005 at 22:29

I thought so too! 😀

KatNo GravatarJune 20th, 2005 at 18:45

I hope that all the father’s had a great day on Sunday… Summer now is just around the corner….:D

KatNo GravatarJune 20th, 2005 at 13:45

I hope that all the father’s had a great day on Sunday… Summer now is just around the corner….:D

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