The authorship of the poem is disputed, with a number of people claiming to have written it. In 2008, Rachel Aviv, in a
Poetry Foundation article, discusses the claims of Burrell Webb, Mary Stevenson, Margaret Fishback Powers, and Carolyn Joyce Carty. Later that year,
The Washington Post, covering a lawsuit between the claims of Stevenson, Powers, and Carty, said that "At least a dozen people" had claimed credit for the poem. The three authors who have most strenuously promoted their authorship are Margaret Powers (née Fishback), Carolyn Carty, and Mary Stevenson. Powers says she wrote the poem on Canadian Thanksgiving weekend, in mid-October 1964. Powers is among the contenders who have resorted to litigation in hopes of establishing a claim. She is occasionally confused with American writer
Margaret Fishback. Powers published an autobiography in 1993. Mary Stevenson is also a purported author of the poem circa 1936. A Stevenson biography was published in 1995, written by
Gail Brewer-Giorgio, who had previously become famous for perpetuating the
conspiracy theory that Elvis Presley might still be alive.
Popular use of phrase Before its appearance in the 1970s, the phrase "footprints in the sand" occurred in other works. The most dominant usage in prose is in the context of fictional or nonfiction adventure or mystery stories or articles. Prominent fiction includes the
Daniel Defoe novel
Robinson Crusoe (1719) and the
Nathaniel Hawthorne short story "Foot-prints on the Sea-shore" (1838), originally published in the
Democratic Review. Hawthorne published the story again in
Twice-Told Tales, and it has been reprinted many times since. A line in the story reads: "Thus, by tracking our foot-prints in the sand, we track our own nature in its wayward course, and steal a glance upon it, when it never dreams of being so observed. Such glances always make us wiser." Non-fiction includes the 1926
post-kidnapping discovery of
Aimee Semple McPherson in the northern Mexican desert. In the two centuries before 1980, when "Footprints" entered popular American culture, many books, articles, and sermons appeared with "Footprints in the Sand" as a title. Some of them concerned the lives of Christian missionaries.
Footprints and Living Songs (1883) is a biography of hymn-writer
Frances Ridley Havergal. The poem "A Psalm of Life" (1839) by
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow contained the lines: Within a decade, the last phrase of the poem was being used in public discourse without attribution, apparently on the assumption that any literate reader would know its origin. In some usages, the clause "of time" disappeared; later, the word "on" seems to have become "in". "The Object of a Life" (1876) by
George Whyte-Melville includes the lines: This poem was published in the widely read (and plagiarized)
Temple Bar. The lines here are strikingly similar in many respects to those seen in contemporaneous hymn lyrics and later poetry.
Biblical background Deuteronomy 1:31 presents the concept of "God bearing you". The 1609
Douay-Rheims Bible Old Testament translation from Latin into English uses the wording: "And in the wilderness (as thou hast seen) the Lord thy God hath carried thee, as a man is wont to carry his little son, all the way that you have come, until you came to this place." In 1971, the
New American Standard Bible used the language "and in the wilderness where you saw how the LORD your God carried you". Nearly identical wording is used in other late-twentieth-century translations, including the
New International Version of 1978.
Possible 19th century origins May Riley Smith's poem "If", published without attribution in the
Indianapolis Journal in 1869, includes a stanza that describes God's footprints in the sand next to a boy's: June Hadden Hobbs suggested that the origin of the modern "Footprints" is in the Mary B. C. Slade hymn "Footsteps of Jesus" (1871) as "almost surely the source of the notion that Jesus's footprints have narrative significance that influences the way believers conduct their life stories...it allows Jesus and a believer to inhabit the same space at the same time...Jesus travels the path of the believer, instead of the other way around." Aviv suggests that the source of the modern "Footprints" allegory is the opening paragraph of the
Charles Haddon Spurgeon sermon "The Education of the Sons of God" (1880). He wrote: In 1883, an American encyclopedia of hymns by female writers included Jetty Vogel, an English poet. Vogel's "At the Portal" follows someone looking at their footprints as they deviate from the proper path. Vogel's hymn has an angel's footsteps but lacks the "I carried you" of the modern "Footprints". In 1892, the
Evening Star ran a short story "Footprints in the Sand", written by
Flora Haines Loughead for the
Star. The work uses a metaphor for Christ, of a father following footprints in the sand of another's child headed for danger, as he wonders, "Why was it that there was nowhere any sign of a larger footprint to guide the little babyish feet?"
Possible 20th century origins In 1918, the Mormon publication ''
The Children's Friend'' re-published the Loughead piece (credited, but misspelled "Laughead"), ensuring a wider distribution in the western states. Chicago area poet Lucille Veneklasen frequently submitted poems to the
Chicago Tribune in the 1940s and 1950s; one entitled "Footprints" was published in the
Tribune in late 1958: ::I walked the road to sorrow—a road so dark with care, so lonely, I was certain that no one else was there. ::But suddenly around me were beams of light, stretched wide; and then I saw that someone was walking by my side. ::And when I turned to notice this road which I had trod, I saw two sets of footprints—My own... and those of God. Veneklasen's poem appeared occasionally in newspaper obituaries, commonly lacking attribution, and often with the name of the deceased substituted for "I". In 1963 and 1964, the
Aiken Standard and Review in South Carolina ran a poem by frequent contributor M. L. Sullivan entitled "Footprints". This was a bit of romantic verse that moves from sadness at "lone footprints in the sand" to close with "our footprints in the sand". == Early documentable history ==