
The Majblomma (definite form: Majblomman; Swedish for 'mayflower') is a paper flower pin sold by schoolchildren in Sweden to raise funds for charity. The Mayflower fundraiser was started in Onsala by Beda Hallberg in 1907,[1] and has taken place in April and May every year since.
The flower pin design has four parts; two groups of five-leaved paper petals, often a small paper disc, and a metal pin, in a different colour combination each year.
History
Hallberg was an active member of Gothenburg's charity movement, and had the idea of selling mayblomma pins, to raise funds for tuberculosis research.
Born in 1869 in Onsala, she was the youngest daughter of a captain and a farmer's daughter. Her father left the family in 1870 to emigrate to the US. She is thought to have married a tobacco dealer in 1888 and got involved with Gothenburg charity work in 1890.
After seeing her daughter with a Gustavus Adolphus Day paper badge, she founded a committee including Frigga Carlberg, a feminist social worker and writer, as well as the municipal physician (stadsläkare) K. J. Gezelius. Despite others doubting her idea, she ordered 100,000 blue-coloured paper flower pins and decided to sell them for 10 öre each (equivalent to SEK4.79 in 2009), an affordable price for most.
Her campaign became a tremendous success. Around 139,000 Mayflowers were sold on 1 May 1907 in Gothenburg – exceeding even Beda's expectations.
A local newspaper wrote the following:
The blue flower has won. The whole city celebrates it. You see it everywhere, wherever you come, on lapels and coats, scarves and shawls. Businessmen, civil servants, workers, old men and children, tram conductors, police officers, kayakers, drivers – they all carry the flower and feel that everyone is happy to be involved. It is the ideal of ideas: simple, enthusiastic and poignant.
Colours throughout the years
The colours of the Swedish majblomma from 1926 to 2023. During the early years, the shape could vary somewhat.
 1926 1926
 1927 1927
 1928 1928
 1929 1929
 1930 1930
 1931 1931
 1932 1932
 1933 1933
 1934 1934
 1935 1935
 1936 1936
 1937 1937
 1938 1938
 1939 1939
 1940 1940
 1941 1941
 1942 1942
 1943 1943
 1944 1944
 1945 1945
 1946 1946
 1947 1947
 1948 1948
 1949 1949
 1950 1950
 1951 1951
 1952 1952
 1953 1953
 1954 1954
 1955 1955
 1956 1956
 1957 1957
 1958 1958
 1959 1959
 1960 1960
 1961 1961
 1962 1962
 1963 1963
 1964 1964
 1965 1965
 1966 1966
 1967 1967
 1968 1968
 1969 1969
 1970 1970
 1971 1971
 1972 1972
 1973 1973
 1974 1974
 1975 1975
 1976 1976
 1977 1977
 1978 1978
 1979 1979
 1980 1980
 1981 1981
 1982 1982
 1983 1983
 1984 1984
 1985 1985
 1986 1986
 1987 1987
 1988 1988
 1989 1989
 1990 1990
 1991 1991
 1992 1992
 1993 1993
 1994 1994
 1995 1995
 1996 1996
 1997 1997
 1998 1998
 1999 1999
 2000 2000
 2001 2001
 2002 2002
 2003 2003
 2004 2004
 2005 2005
 2006 2006
 2007 2007
 2008 2008
 2009 2009
 2010 2010
 2011 2011
 2012 2012
 2013 2013
 2014 2014
 2015 2015
 2016 2016
 2017 2017
 2018 2018
 2019 2019
 2020 2020
 2021 2021
 2022 2022
 2023 2023
Outside of Sweden
Following the initial success in Sweden, similar mayflower fund raising took place in Finland (1908), Norway and Denmark (1909), The Netherlands and Belgium (1910), Russia, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy and France (1911), Britain and Estonia (1912), Algeria (1913), Cuba (1916), The US (1922) and India (1932). However, as tuberculosis rates in Europe declined, most international charities eventually disbanded, and now only remain in Sweden, Finland, Norway, and Estonia (today with different missions).
See also
- Remembrance poppy, used in fundraising for veterans
References
- ↑ Beda S Hallberg, urn:sbl:12409, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Stig Tornehed), hämtad 2022-07-27.
