Journey of Everything

The Daughter, the Disaster, and the Long Road to Honoring Dad: Discovering the Heartwarming Origins of Father's Day

9 min · 19. Juni 2026
Episode The Daughter, the Disaster, and the Long Road to Honoring Dad: Discovering the Heartwarming Origins of Father's Day Cover

Beschreibung

What if one devoted daughter and a devastating mining disaster sparked a holiday we all take for granted? Uncover the warm, human roots of Father’s Day—from Sonora Smart Dodd’s push in Spokane to early tributes in West Virginia—and why it took over 60 years to stick. A story of quiet strength, persistence, and everyday heroes. Discover the surprising origins of Father's Day, from Sonora Smart Dodd's devotion to her single-father Civil War veteran dad to the 1907 Monongah mining disaster that left over 360 fathers gone. This heartwarming story reveals why it took decades for the holiday to become official and the quiet strength it still celebrates today. In 1909, inspired by a Mother’s Day sermon in Spokane, Washington, Sonora Smart Dodd petitioned for a day honoring fathers like hers. The first local celebration happened on June 19, 1910. Parallel to her efforts, a 1908 service in Fairmont, West Virginia, honored fathers lost in the Monongah tragedy. Presidents Johnson and Nixon later made it permanent in 1966 and 1972. Sonora lived to see her idea endure beyond commercial ties and gadgets.

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Episode The Daughter, the Disaster, and the Long Road to Honoring Dad: Discovering the Heartwarming Origins of Father's Day Cover

The Daughter, the Disaster, and the Long Road to Honoring Dad: Discovering the Heartwarming Origins of Father's Day

What if one devoted daughter and a devastating mining disaster sparked a holiday we all take for granted? Uncover the warm, human roots of Father’s Day—from Sonora Smart Dodd’s push in Spokane to early tributes in West Virginia—and why it took over 60 years to stick. A story of quiet strength, persistence, and everyday heroes. Discover the surprising origins of Father's Day, from Sonora Smart Dodd's devotion to her single-father Civil War veteran dad to the 1907 Monongah mining disaster that left over 360 fathers gone. This heartwarming story reveals why it took decades for the holiday to become official and the quiet strength it still celebrates today. In 1909, inspired by a Mother’s Day sermon in Spokane, Washington, Sonora Smart Dodd petitioned for a day honoring fathers like hers. The first local celebration happened on June 19, 1910. Parallel to her efforts, a 1908 service in Fairmont, West Virginia, honored fathers lost in the Monongah tragedy. Presidents Johnson and Nixon later made it permanent in 1966 and 1972. Sonora lived to see her idea endure beyond commercial ties and gadgets.

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