I have a lot of fun with holiday-related blog posts. \u00a0It’s a great excuse to cruise around the web, reading up on history, customs and other’s traditions.<\/p>\n
As for history, I was surprised to find that Father’s Day<\/a> did not become an official holiday until it was permanently established by President Richard Nixon 1972. \u00a0That’s right — it’s only 38 years old.<\/p>\n The first observance took place in Spokane in 1910 — two years after the first Mother’s Day observance. \u00a0It seems that Sonora Smart Dodd<\/a> was listening to a Mother’s Day sermon that brought to mind the sacrifices, love and care that she and her five brothers received from their father after the loss of their mother.<\/p>\n It’s hard to imaging the the idea of honoring both parents was controversial but the idea initially met with mixed reviews. \u00a0Some saw it as an opportunity to remind fathers of the importance of caring for their children, to improve connections and to help fathers to embrace the full measure of their responsibility.\u00a0Senator Margaret Chase Smith advocated for adoption of the holiday writing “Either we honor both our parents, mother and father, or let us desist from honoring either one. But to single out just one of our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable.”<\/p>\n So, in honor of Dads everywhere here are four of my favorite quotes about fathers.<\/p>\n *My father used to play with my brother and me in the yard.\u00a0 Mother would come out and say, “You’re tearing up the grass.”\u00a0 “We’re not raising grass,” Dad would reply.\u00a0 “We’re raising boys.”\u00a0 ~Harmon Killebrew<\/a> MLB All-Star and founder of the Harmon Killebrew Foundation<\/p>\n