Thanksgiving
Day
- National
holiday in the U.S. commemorating the harvest reaped by the Plymouth
Colony in 1621.
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The first national Thanksgiving Day was proclaimed by President
Washington for Nov. 26, 1789. President Lincoln revived the custom
in 1863. In 1941 Congress decreed that Thanksgiving should fall
on the fourth Thursday of November. The customary turkey dinner
is a reminder of the four wild turkeys served at the Pilgrims'
first thanksgiving feast.
In 1621, after a hard and
devastating first year in the New World the Pilgrim's fall harvest
was very successful and plentiful. There was corn, fruits, vegetables,
along with fish which was packed in salt, and meat that was smoke
cured over fires. They found they had enough food to put away
for the winter.
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The Pilgrims had beaten
the odds. They built homes in the wilderness, they raised enough
crops to keep them alive during the long coming winter, and they
were at peace with their Indian neighbors. Their Governor, William
Bradford, proclaimed a day of thanksgiving that was to be shared
by all the colonists and the neighboring Native American Indians. |
The custom of an annually celebrated thanksgiving, held after
the harvest, continued through the years. During the American
Revolution (late 1770's) a day of national thanksgiving was suggested
by the Continental Congress.
In 1817 New York State
adopted Thanksgiving Day as an annual custom.By the middle of
the 19th century many other states also celebrated a Thanksgiving
Day.
In 1863 President Abraham
Lincoln appointed a national day of thanksgiving. Since then
each president has issued a Thanksgiving Day proclamation, usually
designating the fourth Thursday of each November as the holiday.
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