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Honor Men Who Support Women’s Rights

The History of Father’s Day

In the United State the first event recorded in honor of fathers was held on July 5, 1908 in a West Virginia church to honor the hundreds of men who died in a coal mine explosion. It was a one-time commemoration and not an annual holiday. The next year, Sonora Smart Dodd, the daughter of a widower who raised his six children as a single dad in Spokane, Washington, began to work for the equivalent of Mother’s Day for male parents. With the help of local churches, the YMCA, shopkeepers and government officials she worked to generate support for her idea. Her effort was successful when Washington State celebrated the nation’s first statewide Father’s Day on June 19, 1910.

The movement for Father’s Day was honored by President Wilson in 1816 when from Washington, DC he pressed a button to telegraph signals to unfurl a flag in Spokane. By 1924, President Calvin Coolidge urged state governments to observe Father’s Day. In 1966 President Lyndon Johnson signed a presidential proclamation declaring that the third Sunday of June 1966 to be recognized as Father’s Day. It would take six more years before President Richard Nixon established Father’s Day as a permanent national holiday to be observed on the third Sunday of June every year.

Honor Someone Special on Father’s Day – Sunday June 18th
with this beautiful hand addressed card
Send Request by June 13th 

The inscription in the card will read:

Father’s Day 2023

Men who support women’s rights are essential role models for all generations. I so appreciate the love, encouragement, and respect you have given me.

To honor you, I have made a donation in your  name to the National Women’s History Alliance. This gift will help ensure that the importance of women’s stories and the men who supported  them will be honored, recognized, and written into this nation’s history.

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Click HERE for Men Who Supported Women’s Rights Quiz