Mother’s Day in the United States has a history all its own—and it’s
more complicated than greeting cards might lead you to believe. There
were repeated efforts to establish a Mother’s Day holiday and
conflicting ideas about what it should stand for and how it should be
observed. From a call for women to improve global policymaking and seek
peace to a day to honor women’s work and role in the family, the history
of the holiday reveals multiple insights into how mothers shape the
world. Julia Ward Howe, best known as the author of the “Battle
Hymn of the Republic,” was an abolitionist, a women’s rights advocate,
and a peace activist. In 1870, horrified by the death and destruction
she had witnessed during the Civil War and concerned by the
Franco-Prussian war unfolding abroad, Howe issued what has come to be
known as her “Mother’s Day Proclamation,” originally called an “Appeal
to womanhood throughout the world.” In it, Howe urged the creation of an
international body of women who could find ways to avoid war and
bloodshed: “I earnestly ask that a general congress of women,
without limit of nationality, may be appointed … to promote the alliance
of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of
international questions, the great and general interests of peace.” When
that didn’t happen, Howe sought to establish an annual Mother’s Day for
Peace, to be celebrated in June. That did happen in a few places, for a
while. The version of Mother’s Day celebrated today is more
directly rooted in the work of Ann Jarvis and her daughter, Anna Jarvis,
who established the holiday to honor her mother. Frustratingly for the
younger Jarvis, most people don’t celebrate it today the way she
intended.
Ann Maria Reeves Jarvis (1832–1905) bore more than a dozen
children. Most of the children died from diseases such as diphtheria or
measles, which were common during her day in the Appalachian area of
Virginia (later West Virginia) where she lived. Jarvis worked hard in
her community to try to help other mothers and families avoid the
tragedies she had suffered. Part of a national public health movement
populated in large part by women reformers, Jarvis organized “Mothers’
Work Clubs” and promoted special “Mother’s Work Days,” when women would
collaboratively collect trash and undertake other projects to improve
local environmental conditions and their neighbors’ understanding of
hygiene. The focus of Jarvis’ work changed when war struck. Her
region was deeply divided by the Civil War. Local soldiers fought on
both sides of the conflict, and guerilla warfare was rampant. Jarvis
insisted that the women’s groups she organized help both Confederate and
Union troops who were sick or wounded, and she worked to promote peace
and unity following the war. In 1868, despite threats of violence, she
organized a “Mother’s Friendship Day” to bring families from both sides
of the war together to try to restore a sense of community. It’s
possible that Howe’s proclamation two years later was inspired by
Jarvis; the two knew each other. At the very least, Jarvis and Howe
shared the belief that women—and especially mothers—were best suited to
bring people together with a goal of peace. After Ann Jarvis’
death, her daughter, Anna Jarvis (1864–1948), set out to honor her
mother’s legacy by establishing a national Mothers’ Day on the second
Sunday in May, the day her mother had died. Anna, who never married or
had children of her own, did not focus the holiday on peace activism but
on the idea of honoring one’s own mother. She chose white carnations as
an emblem and urged people to write heartfelt letters of gratitude to
their mothers (in Anna Jarvis’ eyes, sending a pre-printed card didn’t
count). Anna succeeded in her quest for official recognition, and
President Wilson issued a proclamation of the first national Mother’s
Day just before the start of World War I in 1914.
Anna Jarvis, however, soon grew discontented as she noted increasing
commercialization of the celebration. What she had wanted to be an
earnest “holy day” had become, in her eyes, a crass holiday benefitting
florists and greeting card companies more than honoring the mothering
work done by women. Anna was so distraught over the way Americans
observed the holiday she had worked hard to establish that she started a
petition to have it recalled in 1943. Five years later she died
penniless in a sanitarium where her bills were paid by the same greeting
card companies and florists she despised. Mother’s Day
provides an excellent opportunity to reflect on and honor the role of
mothers in our own families and in the rich and complicated history of
our nation. |
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