Lizzie remained active with the Soldiers’ Aid Society until it the group was reconstituted as the
Ladies’ Memorial Association of Columbus, Georgia (LMA) in early 1866. The LMA, represented by its secretary and Lizzie's cousin, Mrs.
Mary Ann Williams (also known as Mrs. Charles J. Williams) wrote a letter to the press proposing a new annual holiday to decorate soldiers’ graves and signed “Southern Women.” The holiday was inaugurated across the South on April 26, 1866, with wide newspaper coverage in the North. Several stories focused on the observances in
Columbus, Mississippi and Macon, Georgia where Union graves were also decorated. The observance in Augusta, Georgia also received a lot of press when a group of former slaves were refused permission to decorate Union graves in that city. On July 4, 1866, General
John A. Logan mentioned the observance in a speech in
Salem, Illinois. The observances were repeated in 1867 and 1868. Logan, now commander-in-chief of the
Grand Army of the Republic, adopted the holiday for the North on May 30, 1868. The April 26th version of the holiday became known as "
Confederate Memorial Day" thereafter. Later that year, Lizzie married Captain Roswell Ellis of the Columbus Guards on November 24, 1868. Lizzie died on March 31, 1873, and was honored by the soldiers whose welfare she had supported during the war. Mrs. Williams died a year later. Both were honored at subsequent Memorial Day observances. During their lifetimes, it appears that neither lady personally sought credit for the founding of the holiday. However, after her death, Mrs. Williams was immediately credited for the origination of the holiday. == Revisions to Memorial Day origin story ==