Four-O'Clock Flowers Around the World Cancer Memorial

Providing Free Four-o'clock Flower Seeds as a Living Symbol of Hope
to Plant in Gardens Across America and Around the World

New Orleans, Louisiana Since 1994

This is a cluster of white four-o'clock flowers in full bloom under a Southern afternoon sun in Louisiana. Four-o'clock flowers are trumpet-shaped flowers which bloom in the late afternoon after 4 p.m., hence their name. Four-o'clock flowers come in several colors, including yellow, pink, magenta, white, and mixtures of those colors. Http://www.symbolofhope.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tribute Touches Employees Across America, Focus, October 1994. United States Postal Service. Washington, DC.

This is a thumbnail picture of an article in the USPS publication - Focus- disucssing the cancer project started by Kevin P. Donahoe in honor of his dad - Jim. Http://www.symbolofhope.com

Original Printed Version of This Magazine Article

When postal customer Kevin Donahoe of Metairie, LA, wanted to design a tribute to his recently deceased father who was an avid gardener and cultivator of a flower called "Four-o’clocks," the institution he turned to was the Postal Service.

Donahoe wanted to see his father’s beloved four-o’clock planted in every state in the nation and then mark their location on a map that he would give to his mother on his dad’s birthday.

"I started sending letters on May 16," Donahoe explains, "and by my dad’s birthday on July 17, I had heard from all 50 states and the District of Columbia."

"I was unprepared for the responses," Donahoe adds. "In their letters to me, postmasters and other employees began to see the seeds and flowers as a symbol of hope for a cure for cancer. Others requested additional seeds to share with family and friends and still others sent small token gifts- state pins from Anchorage, AK, Trenton, NJ, and Colorado Springs; a golden angel from Los Angeles; and first-day covers from Denver and Spokane."

Employees who received the letters were equally touched. Says Kay Hill, postmaster’s secretary in Salt Lake City, UT, "I thought it was wonderful that Kevin would want to create a tribute to his father’s memory. I was glad to help by planting the flowers in my garden."

Likewise, Peggy Morgan, secretary, and her boss, Postmaster Robert Hoffman, and other employees at the Tuscaloosa Post Office were happy to help Donahoe reach his goal "We were touched by what he was trying to do. I cried when we got his letter and the seeds," Morgan says, adding that she, Hoffman, and others in the office divided the seeds up, took them home and planted them.

Adds Metairie, LA, Postmaster Jimmie D. Gordon, "I was pleased to learn of the employee response across the country to Kevin’s efforts. Of course, we have planted four-o’clocks at our post office, too." Employees who want to carry on Donahoe’s tribute and plant a symbol of hope for a cancer cure can enclose a self-addressed envelope along with their request.

 
This is a thumbnail picture of anan article written by The United States Postal Service - USPS - which wrote an article on the breast cancer awareness stamp and on the four-o'clock flowers cancer project which appeared in Postal Life. Several thousand postal employees requested free four-o'clock flower seeds.  The article has several embedded pictures, including a yellow flower, a photo of the breast cancer awareness stamp with a pink ribbon in the corner, and a picture of a postal employee hugging her mother who battled cancer. Http://www.symbolofhope.com This is a thumbnail picture of an article on the cancer tribute which appeared in the University of Louisiana at Monroe alumni publication. The article has several photographs in it, including a photo of Kevin Donahoe holding a handful of four-o'clock flower seeds; a photo showing Kevin Donahoe packing envlopes with four-o'clock flower seeds, and a photo of former President George H. W. Bush congratulating Kevin Donahoe for receiving a Point of Light Foundation award for national volunteerism. Http://www.symbolofhope.com This is a photo of several ladies walking in the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure event in New Orleans in 2008. Http://www.symbolofhope.com This is a photo of several cancer survivors who participated in the annual National Cancer Survivors Day which was held in New Orleans in 2009. Http://www.symbolofhope.com
 

 

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