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Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving Pumpkin
Happy Thanksgiving, Everybody!

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A History of Thanksgiving Through Quick, Fun Facts!:

*  Pilgrims (initially known as Puritans) left England...originally to New Holland...not to America...in order to flee religious persecution.

*  Pilgrims did not like their life in New Holland, so they decided to come to America.

1620-1621

*  After boarding the Mayflower, the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock on December 11, 1620.

*  Incidentally, the Pilgrims brought beer with them in the Mayflower.  Yeah!  Get 'er done!

*  Their first winter was terrible and they lost many of their group.

*  In 1621, their first harvest was bountiful.  Sadly, only half of the @100 original group of Pilgrims was still alive.  52 colonists to be exact.  Of these, only four were adult women and about 40% of the surviving Pilgrims were children.

*  Thankful to still be alive, a three-day feast with the Indians who helped them survive was held.  This is what is considered to be the first Thanksgiving.  It started on December 13, 1621.

*  The Wampanoag chief that was invited to the feast was named Massasoit.  About 90 Wampanoag tribesmen came to the feast.

*  The leader of the Pilgrims, Governor William Bradford, invited the Wampanoag for the reason that they taught them how to cultivate the land.

*  There were games as well as food at the first Thanksgiving.

*  What food was served at the first Thanksgiving feast?:

    This is a tough thing for historians to determine.  We do know for sure, according to primary sources, that venison (deer meat) and wild fowl were served.  There are other foods we are fairly certain were served and many more foods that we know were NOT served.  Here is a list of food that we believe was had at the first Thanksgiving feast:

Venison (deer meat) (for certain)

Wild fowl (for certain)-  They could have had wild turkey, but it was most likely that they had seasonal waterfowl like ducks and/or geese.

Cranberries, but NO CRANBERRY SAUCE-  If they did have cranberries they were served for tartness or color.  It wasn't until half a century later that cranberries were sweetened and made into sauces to accompany meat.

Squash or pumpkins, but NO PUMPKIN PIE-  They might have had pumpkins or some kind of squash, but they certainly didn't have butter or wheat flour for making crust.  And even if they did have pie-fixings, they hadn't even built a baking oven, yet.

* What foods did they not have at the first Thanksgiving feast that so many people have had since?:

NO pumpkin pie
NO cranberry sauce
NO potatoes of any kind

*  How was the table set and how did the Pilgrims eat their food?:

    Pilgrims didn't have forks.  They ate their food with spoons, knives, and their fingers.  Salt was on the table and they sprinkled it on their food.  Pepper was used in cooking, but not available on the table.  They wiped their hands on big cloth napkins, which they also used to handle hot pieces of food.


1676

*  The first Thanksgiving Proclamation ever was issued in 1676 in a town called Charlestown, Massachusetts.  By unanimous vote the governing council had clerk, Edward Rawson, make June 29th the day of Thanksgiving.

1777

*  The Continental Congress in 1777 first officially proclaimed Thanksgiving as a holiday.  Keep in mind that they didn't set an annual date for Thanksgiving or even thought that it was going to be held more than once.  This was also before the time of U.S. Presidents.

1789-1863

*  Several people wanted to have an official day of Thanksgiving, including George Washington, who proclaimed a national day of Thanksgiving in 1789.  He did it again in 1795.  Several people did not want an official day of Thanksgiving, including President Thomas Jefferson.

*  Different Presidents and governors would hold Thanksgiving at various times, and it was far from being an organized holiday.

*  Annually, every president after Washington, and before Lincoln, had to proclaim which day in November Thanksgiving was going to be held.  It was not always the last Thursday in November.  That came with Lincoln.

*  Most people, for most years since Washington's time, celebrated Thanksgiving.

*  Sarah J. Hale, a magazine editor, began her campaign to make Thanksgiving an official holiday in 1827.  It wasn't until 1863 that her urging to reinstate Thanksgiving and make it official got the approval of  President Abraham Lincoln.

1863-1938

*  In 1863, Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November as a national day of Thanksgiving.

1939-1941

*  Every President since Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November as Thanksgiving except for President Franklin D. Roosevelt.  In 1939, 1940, and 1941 he proclaimed the THIRD Thursday of November to be Thanksgiving.  Why?  To lengthen the Christmas shopping season and stimulate the economy.  This upset people.

1941-present

*  It was not until 1941 that Congress declared Thanksgiving a national holiday.  They passed an official proclamation making it legal.  It was established to be the fourth Thursday of November.



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