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Meet the woman who started Father's Day

Dodd wanted the celebration to be held on June 5, her father's birthday.

Washington: The whole world is today celebrating the Father's Day but how many of you know that it was started by an American woman who was raised by a widower.

Sonora Smart Dodd was born in Sebastian County in Arkansas in 1882 and her mother died when she was 16. Dodd's father, William Smart, raised her and five brothers after their mother died.

While listening to a Mother's Day sermon with her father at the Central Methodist Church in 1909, Dodd was bothered that there was not a day to honour her civil war veteran father who raised her and five younger brothers alone.

Dodd wanted the celebration to be held on June 5, her father's birthday, but planning difficulties pushed the first Father's Day celebration to Sunday, June 19, 1910, ABC News reported.

As Dodd's idea gained momentum across the country, two National Father's Day committees were formed, one in Virginia in 1921 and one in New York City in 1936.

President Woodrow Wilson sanctioned the idea of celebrating Father's Day in 1913 and visited Spokane to join the celebration in 1916. President Calvin Coolidge supported the idea in 1924, as well.

In 1957, US Senator Margaret Chase Smith from Maine introduced a bill to create a federally proclaimed day writing: "Either we honour both our parents, mother and father, or let us desist from honouring either one. But to single out just one of our two parents and omit the other is the most grievous insult imaginable."

President Lyndon Johnson signed a presidential proclamation declaring the third Sunday of June as Father's Day in 1966. President Richard Nixon established a permanent national observance of the day in 1972.

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