Monday, 11 May 2020



WOMAN WHO CREATED MOTHER’S DAY


The woman responsible for the creation of Mother's Day, marked in many countries on the second Sunday in May, would have approved of the modest celebrations likely to take place this year. The commercialization of the day horrified her to the extent that she even campaigned to have it rescinded.


When Elizabeth Burr received a phone call from someone asking about her family history, she initially thought she had been scammed. "I thought, 'OK, my identity has been stolen, I'll never see my money again,'" she said.

In fact the call came from a family history researcher looking for living relatives of Anna Jarvis, the woman who founded Mother's Day in the United States over a century ago.

Anna Jarvis was one of 13 children but only four of lived to adulthood. Her older brother was the only one to have children of his own, but many of them died young from tuberculosis and his last direct descendant died in the 1980s. Incidentally during the 1930s era when those children died from tuberculosis, I also suffered from tuberculous as a five-year-old boy and was placed   into a sanitorium for a year before I was cured.  Many children in that era  also suffered  from  tuberculosis.

So Elisabeth Zetland of MyHeritage decided to look for first cousins, and that was what led her to Elizabeth Burr.

When Elizabeth had been reassured that her savings were safe, she gave My Heritage the surprising news that her father and aunts hadn't celebrated Mother's Day when they were growing up out of respect for Anna, and her feeling that her idea had been hijacked by commercial interests and debased.

Anna Jarvis's campaign for a special day to celebrate mothers was one she inherited from her own mother, Ann Reeves Jarvis.

Mrs. Jarvis had spent her life mobilizing mothers to care for their children, says historian Katharine Antolini, and she wanted mothers' work to be recognized. "I hope and pray that someone, sometime, will found a memorial mothers' day commemorating her for the matchless service she renders to humanity in every field of life. She is entitled to it," Mrs Jarvis said.
She was very active in the Methodist Episcopal Church, where, from 1858, she ran Mothers' Day Work Clubs to combat high infant and child mortality rates, mostly due to diseases that ravaged their community in Grafton, West Virginia.

In the work clubs mothers learned about hygiene and sanitation, such as the vital importance of boiling drinking water. The organizers provided medicine and supplies to sick families and, when necessary, quarantined entire households to prevent epidemics.

Mrs. Jarvis herself lost nine children, including five during the American Civil War (1861-1865) who most likely succumbed to disease, says Antolini, a professor at West Virginia Wesleyan College.

When Mrs. Jarvis died in 1905, surrounded by her four surviving children, a grief-stricken Anna promised to fulfil her mother's dream, though her approach to the Memorial Day was quite different.

Whereas Mrs. Jarvis wanted to celebrate the work done by mothers to improve the lives of others, Anna's perspective was that of a devoted daughter. Her motto for Mother's Day was "For the Best Mother who Ever Lived—Your Mother." This was why the apostrophe had to be singular, not plural.

Anna envisioned the holiday as a home-coming, a day to honour your mother, the one woman who dedicated her life to you,

In the UK the fourth Sunday in Lent has long been celebrated as Mothering Sunday - originally a day when people who had left home returned to their "mother church" and were reunited with their parents


A movement to revive Mothering Sunday traditions was launched in 1920 by a Nottinghamshire woman, Constance Penswick Smith, out of concern that the secular American  Mother's Day would displace the Christian Mothering Sunday.


Anna Jarvis's chosen day, the second Sunday in May has been adopted by many countries, but a wide variety of other dates are also used around the world

This message was something everyone could get behind, and also appealed to churches - Anna's decision to have the holiday on a Sunday was a smart move.

Three years after Mrs. Jarvis's death, the first Mother's Day was celebrated in the Andrews Methodist Church in Grafton. That was  when Anna Jarvis chose the second Sunday in May because it would always be close to the 9th of  May, the day her mother had died. Anna handed out hundreds of white carnations, her mother's favourite flower, to the mothers who attended.

The popularity of the celebration grew and grew according to the  the Philadelphia Enquirer reports that said that “ soon   you could not "beg, borrow or steal a carnation". In 1910 Mother's Day became a West Virginia state holiday and in 1914 it was designated a national holiday by President Woodrow Wilson.

A huge factor in the day's success was its commercial appeal. "Even though Anna never wanted the day to become commercialized, it did very early just like Christmas.  Subsequently, the floral industry, greeting card industry and candy industry deserve some of the credit for that  day's success which was what Anna wanted.


When the price of carnations rocketed, she released a press release condemning florists: "WHAT WILL YOU DO to rout charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers and other termites that would undermine with their greed one of the finest, noblest and truest movements and celebrations?" By 1920, she was urging people not to buy flowers at all.

She was upset with any organization that used her day for anything but her original, sentimental, design.This included charities that used the holiday for fund-raising, even if they meant to help poor mothers.

It was a day meant to celebrate mothers, not pity them because they were poor, "Plus some charities were not using the money for poor mothers like they claimed."

Mother's Day was even dragged into the debate over women's votes. Anti-suffragists said that a woman's true place was in the home and that she was too busy as a wife and mother to be involved in politics. For their part, suffrage groups would argue, "If she is good enough to be the mother of your children, she is good enough to vote." And they stressed the need for women to have a say in the future well-being of their children.


She was upset with any organization that used her day for anything but her original, sentimental, design.. This included charities that used the holiday for fund-raising, even if they meant to help poor mothers.

It was a day meant to celebrate mothers, not pity them because they were poor, "Plus some charities were not using the money for poor mothers like they claimed."
 
Mother's Day was even dragged into the debate over women's votes. Anti-suffragists said that a woman's true place was in the home and that she was too busy as a wife and mother to be involved in politics. Tell that to the women who are successful politicians and see where that gets you.

For their part, suffrage groups would argue, "If she is good enough to be the mother of your children, she is good enough to vote." And they stressed the need for women to have a say in the future well-being of their children. That is a valid point.

The only one not to take advantage of Mother's Day, it seems, was Anna herself. She refused money offered to her by the florist industry.

She never profited from the day and she could easily have done so. She deserved our admiration for that decision.


Anna and her sister Lillian, who was visually impaired, survived on the inheritance from their father and their brother Claude, who ran a taxi business in Philadelphia before dying of a heart attack. However, Anna went on to spend every penny she got fighting the commercialisation of Mother's Day.

Even before it became a national holiday she had claimed copyright on the phrase "Second Sunday in May, Mother's Day", and threatened to sue anyone who marketed it without her permission.

Sometimes groups or industries would purposely useed the possessive plural spelling 'Mothers' Day' in order to get around Anna's copyright claims, A Newsweek article written in 1944 claimed she had 33 pending lawsuits.

By then she was 80 and almost blind, deaf and destitute, and being cared for in a sanatorium in Philadelphia. There have long been claims that the floral and card industries secretly paid for Anna Jarvis's care, but Antolini has never been able to verify this. "I would like to think that they did, but it just may be a good story and not true," she says.

One of Anna's final acts, while still living with her sister, was to go door-to-door in Philadelphia asking for signatures to back an appeal for Mother's Day to be rescinded. Once she had been admitted to the sanatorium, Lillian soon died of carbon monoxide poisoning while trying to heat the run-down house. "Police claimed that icicles hung from the ceiling because it was so cold," says Antolini. Anna herself died of heart failure in November 1948.


Jane Unkefer, 86, another of Anna's first cousins (and Elizabeth Burr's aunt), thinks Anna Jarvis became obsessed with her anti-commercialisation crusade.

"I don't think they were very wealthy, but she totally ran through whatever money she had," she says.
"It's embarrassing. I wouldn't want people to think the family wasn't caring for her, but she ended up in the equivalent of a pauper's grave."


They may not have been able to help her at the end of her life, but the family did honour Anna's memory in another way - by not celebrating Mother's Day for several generations.


“We really didn't like Mother's Day," says Jane Unkefer. "And the reason we didn't is that my mother, as a child, had heard a lot of negative things said about Mother's Day. We acknowledged it as a nice sentiment, but we didn't go in for the fancy dinner or the bouquets of flowers."

I never had mch opportunity to celebrate Mother’s Day with my own mother as a child and even as a grown man. We, for the most part,  unfortunately  lived apart.


I always give my wife a gift on Mother’s Day but since we all have to stay home during this current Pandemic, I transferred money from my bank account to her bank account via the Internet. 


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