Motherly Love: Sweet treats served to celebrate moms at Crawford Street Playschool

Published 4:00 am Saturday, May 7, 2022

Preschoolers may not completely comprehend all their mothers do for them, but that doesn’t matter. The most important thing is they know they are loved.

To celebrate this love and Mother’s Day, students at Crawford Street Playschool and Early Learning Center held a Muffins with Mom party on Wednesday.

Five-year-old Boone Roberts said he was excited to have his mother, Aline Roberts, there by his side.

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Boone, who could spell his mom’s name without a lick of assistance, said his favorite thing to do with her is to cook and play.

“I like to make food and drinks and go to the playground,” Boone said.

Brittney Daigre, who was once a student at the school when she was a toddler, was enjoying a muffin with her main man, Hayes.

Hayes said his favorite thing to do with his mom is to play “Mario Kart,” and when asked if he knew what kind of muffin his mother liked best, he replied, “Blueberry.”

Mom concurred.

Elizabeth Whittington, the director of the playschool and early learning center, said holding events that celebrate a child’s family member is always fun for the students and teachers.

“It makes me feel closer to them (the children) when I meet their mothers and grandparents and see them devoted to them all,” Whittington said.

History of Mother’s Day

A day of celebrating mothers dates back to the ancient Greeks and Romans. According to history.com, festivals were held in honor of the mother goddesses Rhea and Cybele.

A more modern concept — Mothering Sunday — started as an early Christian festival. It was held on the fourth Sunday of Lent and was seen as a time when the faithful would return to their mother church or the main church in the vicinity of their home for a special service. Mothering Sunday, which was at one time a major tradition in the United Kingdom and parts of Europe, shifted, over time, into a more secular holiday where children would present their mother with flowers and other items of appreciation. This European tradition began to fade, but in the 1930s and 1940s, it merged with American Mother’s Day.

In the U.S., Anna Reeves Jarvis and Julia Ward Howe are two women, who are considered forebears in creating a day to celebrate mothers. Prior to the Civil War, Jarvis helped start “Mother’s Day Work Clubs” which were geared toward teaching local women how to “properly care” for their children. These clubs eventually became unifiers following the end of the war.

The website stated, “In 1868 Jarvis organized ‘Mothers’ Friendship Day,’ at which mothers gathered with former Union and Confederate soldiers to promote reconciliation.”

Howe, a suffragette, in 1870 wrote a “Mother’s Day Proclamation.” Its intent was to unite mothers in promoting world peace. She later, in 1873, campaigned for a “Mother’s Peace Day” to be celebrated on June 2.

Additional Mother’s Day pioneers included Juliet Calhoun Blakely, Mary Towles Sasseen and Frank Hering, sometimes referred to as “the father of Mother’s Day.”

From these beginnings, the official Mother’s Day holiday occurred in the 1900s with credit given to Anna Jarvis, who thought Mother’s Day could be a way to honor the sacrifices mothers made for their children. Jarvis worked hard to bring her idea to fruition, and with financial backing, the first official Mother’s Day was held at a Methodist Church in Grafton, West Virginia in 1908.  Jarvis continued her efforts, wanting Mother’s Day to be added to the national calendar and in 1914 those efforts paid off when President Woodrow Wilson made it official — Mother’s Day would be recognized on the second Sunday in May.

One may think that was the end of the Mother’s Day story, but ironically, in later years, Jarvis began to turn her attention toward denouncing Mother’s Day and even disowned the holiday altogether, so-much-so, that she lobbied the government to remove it from the American calendar.

Jarvis had never intended for Mother’s Day to become commercialized, as reported by the website. “Her version of the day involved wearing a white carnation as a badge and visiting one’s mother or attending church services.”

Obviously, Jarvis’s attempts at canceling the holiday she helped create were not successful.

Fun Facts on Mother’s Day

In the U.S. alone, 122 million phone calls are made to moms on Mother’s Day.

Mother’s Day is the busiest day of the year for the restaurant industry.

Mother’s Day is the third-most-popular holiday in the world, behind only Christmas and Easter.

Around one-quarter of all flowers purchased throughout the year are purchased for Mother’s Day.

Mother’s Day is the third-largest card-sending holiday.

Mother’s Day is one of the most popular church-going days.

Pink and red carnations are given to mothers that are still alive, while white ones are for those who have died.

Women purchase 80 percent of all Mother’s Day cards.

Mother’s Day is popularly celebrated in more than 50 countries around the world. Every country celebrates it in its unique way, and not all celebrate it on the same day.

For example, in what was formerly Yugoslavia, children would tie up their mothers on Mother’s Day. The only way she could get free would be to pay her children with treats.

About Terri Cowart Frazier

Terri Frazier was born in Cleveland. Shortly afterward, the family moved to Vicksburg. She is a part-time reporter at The Vicksburg Post and is the editor of the Vicksburg Living Magazine, which has been awarded First Place by the Mississippi Press Association. She has also been the recipient of a First Place award in the MPA’s Better Newspaper Contest’s editorial division for the “Best Feature Story.”

Terri graduated from Warren Central High School and Mississippi State University where she received a bachelor’s degree in communications with an emphasis in public relations.

Prior to coming to work at The Post a little more than 10 years ago, she did some freelancing at the Jackson Free Press. But for most of her life, she enjoyed being a full-time stay at home mom.

Terri is a member of the Crawford Street United Methodist Church. She is a lifetime member of the Vicksburg Junior Auxiliary and is a past member of the Sampler Antique Club and Town and Country Garden Club. She is married to Dr. Walter Frazier.

“From staying informed with local governmental issues to hearing the stories of its people, a hometown newspaper is vital to a community. I have felt privileged to be part of a dedicated team at The Post throughout my tenure and hope that with theirs and with local support, I will be able to continue to grow and hone in on my skills as I help share the stories in Vicksburg. When asked what I like most about my job, my answer is always ‘the people.’

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