Observed annually on the first Friday in June, National Doughnut Day isn’t a marketing ploy by the American Bakers Association. It actually commemorates the women of the Salvation Army who cared for soldiers serving on the front lines of World War I in Montiers-sur-Saulx, France. After several weeks of inclement weather, the demoralized soldiers’ spirits were lifted by a taste from home. The Doughnut Lassies, as the Salvation Army women became known, are often credited with popularizing the doughnut after soldiers returned home after the war. Later, during the depths of the Great Depression in 1938, Chicago’s Salvation Army began National Doughnut Day as a fundraiser to help those in need. The Salvation Army celebrates National Doughnut Day these days by delivering thousands of doughnuts around the country.
Holey moley–it’s National Doughnut Day!
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Illuminated Uluru
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A timeless view of the night sky
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Wake up, it s Darwin Day
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When Death Valley blew its top
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Gazing upon Portraits of Change
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Fall comes to the Last Frontier
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Who created the Easter Bunny?
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What, no escalator?
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Grab onto the handlebars, kid
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American bison
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The Battle of the Bulge 75 years later
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Up in the Highlands
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Longtailed widowbird at Rietvlei Nature Reserve, South Africa
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In the Garden of Europe
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Hawai i Volcanoes National Park at 106
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Honoring our fallen heroes
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Autumn comes to Old Town
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Joshua Tree National Park
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Headed to the High Country
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Borovets ski resort in Bulgaria
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Jupiter and the Galilean moons
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Welcome to the Ring of Fire
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Beethoven s 250th
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Don t go chasing waterfalls
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Día de los Muertos celebrations in Mexico
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In Sicily, history is everywhere
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San Francisco Bay salt flats
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Commemorating the life of a famous railroad conductor
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A hit ballet, long after its debut
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It’s Weihnachtsmarkt time!