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Sonora Dodd, of Washington, first had the idea of a "Father's Day". She thought of the idea for Father's Day while listening to a Mother's Day sermon in 1909.

Sonora wanted a special day to honor her father, William Smart. Smart, who was a Civil War veteran, was widowed when his wife died while giving birth to their sixth child. Mr. Smart was left to raise the newborn and his other five children by himself on a rural farm in eastern Washington State.

After Sonora became an adult she realized the selflessness her father had shown in raising his children as a single parent. It was her father that made all the parental sacrifices and was in the eyes of his daughter, a courageous, selfless, and loving man. Sonora's father was born in June, so she chose to hold the first Father's Day Celebration in Spokane, Washington on the 19th of June 1910.

President Calvin Coolidge, in 1924, supported the idea of a national Father's Day. Then in 1966 President Lyndon Johnson signed a presidential proclamation declaring the 3rd Sunday of June as Father's Day.

"I cannot think of any need in childhood as strong as the need for a father's protection."

--Sigmund
Freud

"If the new American father feels bewildered and even defeated, let him take comfort from the fact that whatever he does in any
fathering
situation has a fifty percent chance of being right"--
Bill Cosby

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FATHERS IN THE UNITED STATES
• 15.8 percent of children were living in households with no adult male (age 21 plus) present
• 7.2 percent of children were living in neighborhoods where more than half of all families with children are female headed
• 30.0 percent of all men (ages 25-34) earned less than the poverty level for a family of four
*Statistics are based on 1990 census (United States)

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