Grandparents Day - Sunday After Labor Day

Sunday After Labor Day is Grandparents Day because of the efforts of Mariann McQuade


In 1970 Mrs. McQuade initiated a grassroots campaign to set aside a special day just for Grandparents. Years of working with civic, business, church and political leaders paid off in 1973 when West Virginia Governor Arch A. Moore proclaimed the first National Grandparents Day. Also in 1973, Senator Jennings Randolph (D-WV) introduced a Grandparents Day resolution in the United States Senate. When the resolution languished in committee, Mrs. McQuade began a determined national effort to get the resolution passed.

Mrs. McQuade petitioned governors in 49 states to follow West Virginia and set aside a Grandparents Day. Forty-three of those governors sent proclamations to Mrs. McQuade, each declaring a holiday in their states. With this momentum, the bill (Public Law 96-62) was signed into legislation in 1978 by President Jimmy Carter proclaiming the first Sunday after Labor Day each year as National Grandparents Day. National Grandparents Day celebrated its 30th anniversary this year.

In part, the Grandparents Day proclamation reads: “Grandparents are our continuing tie to the near-past, to events and beliefs and experiences that so strongly affect our lives and the world around us. Whether they are our own or surrogate grandparents who fill some of the gaps in our mobile society, our senior generation also provides our society a link to our national heritage and traditions.”

When Mrs. McQuade was asked about founding National Grandparents Day, she said “I am the luckiest person in the world. I have a wonderful and understanding husband, my children are all healthy and well, and my grandchildren and great-grandchildren brighten my days. And then I have my work promoting Grandparents Day, working with seniors and visiting the sick and lonely in hospitals and nursing homes. What more could I want?”

Mrs. McQuade’s legacy is now being carried on by many of her children and grandchildren, some of whom work on the National Grandparents Day Council, the non-profit corporation established by descendants of Marian H. McQuade. (www.grandparents-day.com). The council’s purpose is to protect and promote the original intent of National Grandparents Day as championing the elderly. The council also works to enlarge and enhance the celebration of the holiday by cultivating intergenerational activities throughout the year.

Mrs. McQuade’s work with senior citizens dates back to 1956, when she first helped Jim Comstock, editor of the West Virginia Hillbilly and the Richwood News Leader, with organizing a Past 80 Party. The Past 80 Party became an annual event celebrating the state’s octogenarians.

She went on to become Vice-Chair of the West Virginia Commission on Aging and was appointed as a delegate to the White House Conference on Aging. In 1972, Mrs. McQuade’s efforts resulted in President Richard Nixon proclaiming a National Shut-in Day. She also served as President of the Vocational Rehabilitation Foundation, Vice-President of the West Virginia Health Systems Agency, and was appointed to the Nursing Home Licensing Board, among many other involvements.

In 1970, Mrs. McQuade ran for United States House of Representatives in West Virginia’s 5th Congressional District. She was an alternate delegate to the Republican National Convention from West Virginia in 1972. Also in 1972, she was a candidate for West Virginia State Senate 11th District.

Mrs. McQuade’s efforts on behalf of the elderly and in the establishment of National Grandparents Day have been recognized through numerous honors. In 1976, Mrs. McQuade received a citation as one of 10 West Virginia Women of Accomplishment and in 1981 she was designated Whitman’s Chocolates’ Grandparent of the Year. The U.S. Postal Service issued a commemorative envelope bearing Mrs. McQuade’s likeness in 1989 for the tenth anniversary of National Grandparents Day. On the 25th anniversary of the first West Virginia observance of the holiday, new West Virginia state highway signs were erected outside her hometown, announcing Oak Hill, West Virginia as the ‘Home of Marian McQuade, Founder of National Grandparents Day.’

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