Sonora Smart Dodd
Sonora Louise Smart Dodd (February 18, 1882 - March 22, 1978) bụ nwa nwanyị nke onye Agha Obodo America bụ William Jackson Smart, ọ bụkwa ya guzobere Father's Day . [1] [2][3]
Ndụ mbido
dezieA mụrụ Sonora Louise Smart na Jenny Lind, Sebastian County, Arkansas nye William Jackson Smart (1842-1919) na nwunye ya Ellen Victoria Cheek Smart (1851-1898) na February 18, 1882. Na 1889, mgbe Sonora dị afọ asaa. Ezinụlọ Smart si na Marion, Arkansas, kwaga n'ugbo ọdịda anyanwụ nke Spokane, Washington n'etiti Creston na Wilbur.
Mgbe Sonora dị afọ iri na isii, nne ya nwụrụ mgbe ọ na-amụ nwa ya nke isii. Sonora bụ naanị nwa nwanyị ma soro nna ya William zụlite ụmụnne ya ndị obere, gụnyere nwanne ya nwoke ọhụrụ Marshall. Sonora Smart lụrụ John Bruce Dodd (1870-1945), otu n'ime ndị guzobere Ball & Dodd Funeral Home, ma nwee nwa nwoke, John Bruce "Jack" Dodd, amụrụ na 1909.
Ụbọchị Nna
dezieỌ bụ ezie na a na-eme ememe Ụbọchị Nna na July 5, 1908 na West Virginia iji sọpụrụ ndị nna gburu na Monongah Mine Disaster, ọ bụ Sonora Smart Dodd bụ onye a na-ewere dị ka onye malitere ezumike mba America.[4]
Smart ji nna ya kpọrọ ihe nke ukwuu. Mgbe ọ na-anụ okwuchukwu ụka banyere Ụbọchị Nne a ma ama ọhụrụ na Central Methodist Episcopal Church, [5] Sonora chere na nna chọrọ nkwenye. Ọ gakwuuru Spokane Ministerial Alliance wee tụọ aro ụbọchị ọmụmụ nna ya, nke June 5, dị ka ụbọchị nsọpụrụ maka ndị nna. Alliance họọrọ Sunday nke atọ na June kama.
Emere Ụbọchị Nna nke mbụ na June 19, 1910, na Spokane, Washington. N'agbanyeghị na emume ezumike ahụ kwụsịrị n'afọ ndị 1920,[1] ka oge na-aga, echiche nke ụbọchị nna bịara bụrụ ihe ewu ewu ma nabata n'ofe mba ahụ. Na 1916, President Woodrow Wilson zipụrụ telegraph na Spokane na-eto ọrụ Ụbọchị Nna. William Jennings Bryan bụ onye ọzọ nwere mmasị na mmemme ahụ n'oge.[2] N'afọ 1966, Onye isi ala Lyndon B. Johnson bịanyere aka na nkwupụta onye isi ala na-ekwupụta ụbọchị Sọnde nke atọ nke June ka ụbọchị Nna. N'afọ 1972, Onye isi ala Nixon hiwere emume ụbọchị nna nke mba na-adịgide adịgide nke a ga-eme na Sọnde 3rd nke June kwa afọ.
A na-asọpụrụ Dodd na Expo '74, World's Fair, na Spokane na 1974. Ọ nwụrụ afọ anọ ka e mesịrị mgbe ọ dị afọ iri itoolu na isii, e lie ya na Greenwood Memorial Terrace na Spokane.
Ọrụ ndị ọzọ
dezieE wezụga nkwado ya maka Ụbọchị Nna, Dodd na-arụkwa ọrụ na Spokane isi nke Women's Christian Temperance Union.
N'afọ 1920, Dodd nọrọ oge ụfọdụ na Spokane, na-amụ ihe na School of the Art Institute of Chicago, na-ese ihe, na-ede uri, ma na-arụ ọrụ na imewe ejiji na Hollywood.[6]
Hụkwa
dezie- Grace Golden Clayton
Edensibia
dezie- ↑ TIME.com Print Page: TIME Magazine - Does Fatherhood Make You Happy?. Wjh.harvard.edu (2006-06-11). Archived from the original on 2011-12-12. Retrieved on 2012-06-18.
- ↑ Father's Day. Melrosemirror.media.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 2011-08-06. Retrieved on 2012-06-18.
- ↑ Sonora Louise Smart Dodd. Spokane Regional Convention & Visitor Bureau (February 19, 2010). Archived from the original on August 12, 2016. Retrieved on August 22, 2016.
- ↑ Father's Day. West Virginia State Museum Education. Archived from the original on 29 November 2020. Retrieved on 14 October 2024.
- ↑ Butler. Father's Day has Methodist ties. The United Methodist Church. Retrieved on 15 June 2014. “In 1909 in Spokane, Wash., Sonora Smart Dodd listened to a Mother's Day sermon at Central Methodist Episcopal Church. Dodd's own mother had died 11 years earlier, and her father had raised their six children alone. Dodd felt moved to honor her father, and fathers everywhere, with a special day as well. She proposed her idea to local religious leaders, and gained wide acceptance. June 19, 1910, was designated as the first Father's Day, and sermons honoring fathers were presented throughout the city.”
- ↑ Schmidt (1997). Consumer Rites: The Buying and Selling of American Holidays. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691017212. OCLC 256735309. Retrieved on 15 April 2013.