10 May 2009

Happy Mother's Day




Ann Marie Reeves Jarvis, the mother of 11 children, only four of whom lived to adulthood. Prior and during the Civil War, Jarvis had seen enough death and decided to do something about poor sanitation in her hometown of Webster, Va.

So along with other mothers, Jarvis organized groups that inspected milk given to children, provided food for the poor, and cared for the families of tubercular mothers. When Webster was beset by an influx of U.S. Civil War soldiers, she cared equally for Union and Confederate men.

And when hostilities came to end, Jarvis recognized that her motherly role was not similarly at an end, so she held a special day for soldiers and their families -- a kind of reconciliation between North and South.

Jarvis died on May 9, 1905 -- the second Sunday in May. And in recognition of her mother's warmth, nurturance and unconditional love, her daughter Anna successfully lobbied to have the day celebrated in honour of all mothers.

3 comments:

carol g said...

What a nice trip down a historical memory lane. Thank you once again for the trip, Jamie :o)

Travis Cody said...

At first glance, I thought she looked like a very stern woman. But then I looked again, and realized that her expression seems more sorrowful than stern.

I did not know the history of Mother's Day. Thanks for the information.

This Eclectic Life said...

Amazing that we never learned about women like this in our history classes. History was always "his" story!

Thanks for sharing that one.