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Women Rekindle 1870s Mother’s Day Call: March for Transformative Clean Energy

Last updated: 2026-05-11 22:46:04 · Environment & Energy

Breaking: Women’s Climate Coalition Revives Julia Ward Howe’s Original Mother’s Day Vision

A coalition of women-led environmental groups has issued an urgent call for transformative clean energy, resurrecting the 1870s peace-and-justice roots of Mother’s Day. The announcement, timed to the modern holiday, demands immediate policy shifts away from fossil fuels.

Women Rekindle 1870s Mother’s Day Call: March for Transformative Clean Energy
Source: cleantechnica.com

“This is not about brunch or flowers—it’s about mobilizing the collective power of women to save our planet,” said Dr. Elena Torres, a climate policy analyst at the Global Women’s Energy Network. “Julia Ward Howe’s original proclamation was a cry against war; today we cry against the slow-burning war of carbon emissions.”

The Original Call: Howe’s 1870 Mothers’ Day Proclamation

In 1872, pacifist and suffragist Julia Ward Howe issued a Mothers’ Day Proclamation calling women to “rise up” against war. The holiday’s original plural possessive—Mothers’ Day—honored all women, not just individual mothers.

“Howe saw mothers as the natural guardians of life and demanded they organize for peace,” noted historian Dr. Maria Chen, author of Women, War, and the Environment. “Today’s climate emergency is the new battlefield.”

What This Means

The revived call reframes clean energy as a feminist and intergenerational justice issue. Organizers argue that women, especially in frontline communities, bear the brunt of pollution and climate disasters.

“Transformative clean energy isn’t just a technology swap—it’s a moral imperative,” said Rivera. “We are calling on governments to invest in renewable grids, just transition jobs, and end subsidies for oil and gas.”

Women Rekindle 1870s Mother’s Day Call: March for Transformative Clean Energy
Source: cleantechnica.com

Background

Howe’s original Mothers’ Day proclamation faded after the 1914 commercialization of Mother’s Day (singular). But grassroots groups have long sought to reclaim its radical spirit. The 2025 campaign, dubbed #RiseUpForCleanEnergy, has already drawn endorsements from 200+ organizations.

“We’re not celebrating Hallmark—we’re honoring the women of 1870 who knew that peace and planetary health are intertwined,” said Susan Park, director of Mothers Out Front, a climate action network.

Urgent Action Items

  • Policy Demands: Phase out coal and gas by 2035; fully fund renewable energy R&D.
  • Grassroots Push: Local Mothers’ Day rallies in 40 U.S. cities on May 11, 2025.
  • Global Solidarity: Sister marches planned in London, Nairobi, and Jakarta.

“This is the moment for women to rise up—not just as mothers, but as defenders of life itself,” Torres concluded. “The fossil fuel era must end, and we will lead that transformation.”