It’s Grandparent’s Day and we’re here to say, We love our grandparents in a major way. So sit right down and take a seat, enjoy your day and all the treats!
Grandparents Day Celebration Sunday, September 10, 11:00 a.m. Worship Service and Celebration Soup and Salad Lunch after church Community Invited! Free Family pictures and Treats for grandparents!
A Grandma’s heart is a patchwork of love!
Grandchildren don’t stay young forever, which is good because grandfathers have only so many horse rides in them.
The best babysitters, of coarse, are the grandparents. You feel completely comfortable entrusting your baby to them for long periods of time, which is why most grandparents flee to Florida!
Grandparents are as necessary to a child’s growth as vitamins.
Grandma – the original “laptop”
Grandfathers are for loving and fixing things.
Children’s children are a crown to the aged, and parents are the pride of their children
—Proverbs 17:6
National Grandparents Day has more than one origin. Some people consider it to have been first proposed by Michael Goldgar in the 1970s after he visited his aunt in an Atlanta nursing home, Spending $11,000 of his own money in lobbying efforts to have the day officially recognized, he made 17 trips to Washington DC over a seven-year span to meet with legislators.
Others consider Marian Lucille Herndon McQuade, a housewife in West Virginia, to have been the main driver for the day of observance. Throughout the 1970s McQuade worked hard to educate the people about the important contributions senior citizens made and the contributions that they would be willing to make if asked. She also urged people to adopt a grandparent, not for one day a year and not for material giving, but for a lifetime of experience.
In any event National Grandparents Day was finally signed into law by President Jimmy Carter in 1978. Marian McQuade received a phone call from the White House to advise her of this event. Many people believe that National Grandparents Day was inspired by her efforts. A presidential proclamation on September 6, 1979, made this day official – it designated Sunday, September 9, 1979, (being the “first Sunday of September following Labor Day”) as National Grandparents Day.
Each year the President is requested to issue a proclamation to: designate the first Sunday in September after Labor Day as National Grandparents Day; and to call on people, groups and organizations to observe the day with appropriate ceremonies and activities.