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History
of Red Cross Month
What
is the history of Red Cross Month, and why is it
significant to our organization?
"I request that during that month (March)
our people rededicate themselves to the splendid aims and activities of the Red
Cross."
--President Franklin D. Roosevelt, first
Presidential Proclamation of March as Red Cross Month, 1943
Each
year the president of the United States proclaims March
"Red Cross Month." The American Red Cross uses
this opportunity to promote its services to the American
public and for fund raising. How did this tradition come
about?
For
the first quarter century of its existence, the Red
Cross held no regular fund-raising drives. Since Clara
Barton created the organization in 1881, it was largely
dependent for publicity and funds on the spontaneous
support of people who learned of catastrophic events and
the Red Cross response to them. News of an event broke,
the American Red Cross rushed to the scene with help,
and people around the country came forth with
outpourings of volunteer assistance and donations of
funds and supplies.
This
rather haphazard manner of operating changed abruptly in
1917, when the United States entered World War I. After
declaring war, President Wilson ordered the American Red
Cross to raise funds to support its aid to the military
and civilians affected by war, as Congress had mandated.
In response, the Red Cross held its first national War
Fund drive in June 1917 and set as its goal $100
million, an astoundingly large sum at the time. Under
the circumstances, however, the public response was
immediate and overwhelming. Within a few days, more than
$115 million was raised. Then in December 1917, the Red
Cross held its first "Christmas Roll Call."
People were asked to give a minimum of $1 to join the
organization's membership rolls. This drive also proved
highly successful, as did an additional War Fund drive
and another Roll Call in 1918, the last year of the
war.
After
the war, the Red Cross decided to make the Roll Call an
annual membership and fund-raising drive. In addition,
it conducted special appeals from time to time in
response to major disasters, such as the Dust Bowl
drought of the early 1930s and periodic flooding on the
Mississippi and Ohio rivers.
In
November 1941, with war in Europe, the Red Cross
conducted a highly successful 25th Annual Roll Call. A
few days later the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and
the United States entered World War II. As it had done
in the previous World War, the Red Cross responded
immediately by declaring a War Fund campaign. By June
1942, it had raised more than $66 million.
Rather
than go back to the public with a third appeal in one
year, the Red Cross decided to cancel its 1942 Roll
Call. Instead, after discussions with President
Roosevelt, the honorary chairman of the Red Cross, the
whole month of March 1943 was declared "Red Cross
Month." The Red Cross set a goal of $125 million,
the largest amount ever requested in one campaign by any
American organization. Again, the response was
overwhelming. It took less than six weeks to reach the
target, and by June 1943 donations totaled nearly $146
million. Roosevelt called it "The greatest single
crusade of mercy in all of history."
This
success caused the Red Cross to repeat the March drive
during the remaining years of the war and then to make
it the occasion of its annual membership and
fund-raising efforts ever since. (As a historical
footnote, the last radio speech President Roosevelt
gave, a few days before his death, was in support of the
1945 Red Cross campaign.) As part of the tradition, the
president customarily issues a proclamation each year
declaring March as Red Cross Month.
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