Season of Peace and Thanksgiving
30 November, 2006
Thanksgiving Day, 2006
With the Thanksgiving holiday we are “turning the corner” on the year and heading – increasingly, it seems, with vertiginous fury – toward the winter holiday season. But if we rein in the urge to go racing off down the slopes toward the new year, maybe we can learn something of use: something of gratitude and something of peace.
I am endebted to Prof. Aubrey Williams at the University of Maryland, who brought some interesting information about the Thanksgiving holiday to light :
• An epidemic had wiped out thousands of American Indians along the North Atlantic coast three years before the Mayflower landed. The Plymouth Company knew of this. Far from breaking new ground, the newcomers took over cleared fields and a harbor that had belonged to the Patuxet tribe.
• Scurvy and pneumonia killed more than half the Pilgrims during the first year, leaving 50 survivors, including just 5 of 18 wives.
• Plymouth colony governor William Bradford ordered the first thanksgiving feast, following established English traditions of harvest celebrations. The Indians also had a traditional harvest feast, the Green Corn Dance. The 50 colonists were joined by 90 Indians (only men are mentioned). The Indians brought 5 deer. There were also turkeys, wild geese, ducks, lobsters, eels, clams, oysters, and fish; also dried berries and fruits, biscuits, and English wheat bread as well as various corn dishes which the Indian guide Squanto had instructed the colonists to make. There was no pumpkin pie. That came later.
• It’s likely that the five surviving women and a handful of children and young girls prepared the food to serve 140 people for three days.
• The feast was not repeated the following year because the harvest was too meagre. George Washington set aside a national day of Thanksgiving on November 26, 1789, but it was not regularly observed by later presidents. Our modern celebration dates to 1863 when Abraham Lincoln set aside the 4th Thursday in November as a national holiday to muster Union patriotism. The Pilgrims wre not part of this national holiday until the 1890s, and the term “pilgrim” was not used until the 1870s.
Sources include James W. Loewen's Lies My Teacher Told Me : Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (1995), Ralph and Adelin Linton's We Gather Together : The Story of Thanksgiving (1949), and Laurie Weinstein Farson's The Wampanoag (1989).
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