The establishment of the United Offering (now the United Thank
Offering) at the General Convention of 1889 was the crucial step. There
is a legend about the offering's origin. At the Women's Auxiliary
meeting during the General Convention of 1886, about five hundred women
were present for the worship service. And yet, when Mrs. Ida Soule,
then serving as a delegate from Pittsburgh, helped to count the
offering, she found the women had only given a total of eighty-seven
dollars. Dismayed at the meager amount, she suggested to Julia Emery
that perhaps if the women knew where their money was going, they might
be inspired to contribute more generously. Emery agreed and urged her
to write a letter suggesting that, just before the next Triennial
Meeting, the offering earmarked for a specific project. Emery would
publish the letter in The Spirit of Missions and announce the
designated recipient of that years' offering. 1
In the early years the Women's Auxiliary collected the money at the
General Convention and their focus was on expanding the mission of the
church. Grants supported training women in the church, supporting and
sending women missionaries domestically and overseas and funding the
building of schools, hospitals and church buildings all over the USA.
The United Offering became the United Thank Offering in the year 1919. That triennium the offering totaled $1,371,537.
In the 1943 triennium the UTO offering surpassed the one million
mark for the first time and in 1949 it had increased to almost 2
million.
In 1952 Bishop Gordon of Alaska was awarded UTO money for an
airplane in order to reach the parishes. He coined the phrase “Blue
Box”, and the plane in its honor.
In l970 the Executive Council gave permission to the General
Division of Women's Work to allocate the offering on an annual basis.
At the 1970 triennial meeting an independent National United Thank
Offering Committee was established. Its responsibilities were to
promote, interpret, and allocated the offerings annually.
The new UTO committee, with 9 elected Provincial members, two
members from the former Committee for Women, 1 from the Executive
Council and 1 from the Lay Ministry Committee (both men), processed and
allocated the 1971 and 1972 Offerings and prepared the Proposed Grant
List for the 1973 triennial meeting to consider.
UTO celebrated their Centennial Anniversary and funds available for
granting topped three million for the first time. UTO begins this new
millennium by granting over $3 million.