First Father’s Day was in 1910

“Anyone can be a father, but it takes a special person to be called, Dad.”
 – Author Unknown 

Father and sons take a stroll down 248th Ave in Paddock Lake. The Baker boys Jacob, 10, and Dad Rob high five, while the newest member of the family Ryan, 7 months, is ready for a nap.

Father and sons take a stroll down 248th Ave in Paddock Lake. The Baker boys Jacob, 10, and Dad, Rob, high five, while the newest member of the family Ryan, 7 months, is ready for a nap.

I found this history of Father’s Day on funmunch.com. This is very interesting, and the appropriate day to share with our readers.

The creation of a national day for Dads began back in the 1900s when a grateful daughter wanted to express her deep appreciation for her own father. A gentleman by the name of William Smart, a civil war veteran, was widowed when his wife died in childbirth. Mr. Smart raised his six children on a rural farm in eastern Washington State. When Sonora Louise Smart Dodd, one of Mr. Smart’s children, was grown she wanted to show her appreciation for her father. He had shown her a great love and strength in raising her and her siblings as a single parent. So, in 1909, she proposed a day to honor her father in June (the month of her father’s birth).

The very first Father’s Day followed on June 19, 1910 in Spokane, Washington. In 1924, President Calvin Coolidge showed support of this becoming a national holiday. However, it wasn’t until 1966 when President Lyndon Johnson officially proclaimed Father’s Day a national holiday to be celebrated on the 3rd Sunday of June.

Harry C. Meek, president of the Lions Club in Chicago, was also a component in establishing Fathers’ Day. He gave several speeches around the United States expressing the need for a day to honor our fathers. In 1920, the Lions Clubs of America presented him with a gold watch, with the inscription “Originator of Father’s Day.”

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