The Weekend Project: Arts and Crafts that Fathers Will Love
June 17, 2022

We celebrate the men we look up to, our fathers and the father figures in our lives, on the third Sunday of June. There are a lot of ways to show appreciation. One of which, especially if you have young kids, is to make arts and crafts. Not only do fathers have keepsakes, the time and effort during the arts and crafts session is one such memory that both the father and the child will hold dearly.
According to historians, the earliest recorded celebration of Father’s Day was on July 5, 1908. The commemoration was in honor of the men lost in the mining incident, the Monograph Mining Disaster in West Virginia, in December of 1907. Around 361 men were killed and around 1,000 children were left fatherless because of the incident.
Records also say that the origin of the Father’s Day celebration was on June 19, 1910, when the YMCA in Spolan, Washington with the help of Sonora Smart Dodd recruited clergymen to honor the fathers.
Another was in 1915, Harry Meek and the Lion’s Club, celebrated Father's Day on the third week of June. It coincided with Meek’s birthday, whom the Lion’s Club named as the “Originator of Father’s Day.”
After many attempts and much effort, Father's Day became a permanent national holiday in 1972 when then President Richard Nixon signed it into a law. It came after 50 years of celebrating Mother’s Day in May every year.