What Do Your Flowers Say On Mother's Day?
Posted: Tuesday, April 17, 2007
by Diana Cochran
Vann Jernigan Florist
The custom of celebrating mothers goes as far back as the 1600s when in England there was a holiday called Mothering Sunday, celebrated on the fourth Sunday of Lent. In America, the celebration of Mother's Day was created in 1872 by Julia Ward Howe the woman who wrote the lyrics to the "Battle Hymn of the Republic"; but the idea didn't catch on widely until 1907. That year, Anna Jarvis began a campaign to establish Mother's Day as an official holiday. By 1914 President Woodrow Wilson made Mother's Day a national holiday.
Explore some of Mother's Day's most popular flowers and their meanings.
Aster - Charming variety
Bluebell - Devotion and kindness
Chrysanthemum (Red) - I love you
Daisy - Innocence and the sharing of sentiment; reciprocation of love
Forget-me-not - Remembrance and true love
Stock- Lasting beauty
Myrtle - Love
Orange Blossom - Your purity equals your loveliness; chastity
Orchid - Refinement, luxurious beauty
Roses (Red & White together) - Warmth of heart
Snapdragons - Trust, hope, conviction
Tulips (Red) - A declaration of love
Lilly (White) - Sweetness
Zinnia (Magenta) - Thoughts of love for those not present
Van Jernigan Florist
Diana Cochran
404-881-9790
vannjernigan@bellsouth.net
vjflorist.com
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