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UWRA Updates



November 2, 2020

11/2/2020

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Long Before Live United, Slogans Define United Way

Publications, PSAs, posters, banners, letterhead, and clothing have long carried unforgettable messages from United Way organizations, defining themselves and their constituents from the beginnings of “Give Once for All” to today’s LIVE UNITED. Our slogans have been clever: “Put All Your Begs in One Askit” (Cincinnati 1925) and compelling: “Don’t Give Until It Hurts, Give Until It Helps” (Licking County, Newark, OH, 1964). Whether a multi-year hallmark like, “Thanks to YOU – it’s working the United Way,” or the one-shot, “If you don’t do it, it won’t get done,” our slogans have defined us.

Innovation characterized Minneapolis’ slogans during the early years of that community’s campaigns. In 1920, posters carried the complex message, “All races, creeds, humanity smile when the Town Tea Kettle sings. In 1923, they simply read, “Have a Heart to Finance 65 Social Agencies.” During the early 1930s, their creativity continued to supply slogans that were copied by many other United Way organizations. Their 1928, 1929, and 1930 advertising read, “He ain’t heavy, he’s my brother,” and pictured a young man carrying a boy holding a crutch. Years after its use by United Way organizations, those words became the trademark of Omaha-based Boys’ Town. Thanks to George Eastman’s film business, Rochester’s 1920 to 1927 campaign theme became the title of United Way’s first campaign movie: “Suppose Nobody Cared.”
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We’ve earned our livings surrounded by posters that read, “Give Where You Work.” At the borders of many bedroom communities, competing billboards said, “Give Where You Live.” And if we lived or worked abroad, the words appearing with the United Way helping hand logo in Hungary read “Elj Egységesen” (Live United), in Poland, “Zyć Zjednoczony,” and in China, “活着团结.”

Author: Dick Aft, UW Historian and UWRA Emeritus Board Member


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