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Twelve-year-old Anna Jarvis remembered that. Her mother died in 1905, and Jarvis, then in her 40s, promised at her gravesite that she’d be the one to answer her prayer.
Jarvis was very intentional about the name of her holiday. It’s Mother’s Day — as in one mom. The way Jarvis put it, Mother’s Day is a day to honor “the best mother who ever lived, yours.” ...
An undated photo of Anna Jarvis, from Grafton, West Virginia, who promoted and achieved the proclamation of Mother's Day as a national holiday, in honor of her mother, Anna Marie Reeves Jarvis.
Mother’s Day ain’t what it used to be. The family of Anna Jarvis, the holiday’s founder, are following in their ancestor’s footsteps — by refusing to recognize the controversial date.
Anna Jarvis spent her life combating the day’s commercialism, disrupting candy conventions, hounding public officials—fighting her baby to save it.
Anna Marie Jarvis lobbied for more than a decade to have her nation remember mothers, in honor of her own mother's wishes. Then, she fought to end it. At the end of the 19th century, her mother ...
Meanwhile, Anna Jarvis’s Mother’s Day wasn’t the only celebration dedicated to mothers during this time. Writer, abolitionist, and suffragist Julia Ward Howe established “Mothers’ Peace ...
Championed by Anna Jarvis, the holiday has a surprising history. — -- Ironically, the founder of Mother’s Day was not a mother herself. Anna Jarvis created the holiday to honor her late ...
Not if you’re Anna Jarvis, the woman who founded Mother’s Day back in the early 1900s, then barnstormed all around the nation until President Woodrow Wilson declared in 1914 that the second ...
My odyssey mirrored, in many ways, the journey that Anna Jarvis took on her path in the early 1900s to help establish Mother's Day as a national holiday.
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