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Thanksgiving - Understanding The Holiday
By Robert Benjamin
Thanksgiving to most folks means family and friends and Turkey,
or maybe beer and football. Many do not know or even care about
the significence of the Holiday. Way back in the 1600's a group
of people who were members of the English Separatist Church
(Puritan's) in England fled their homeland to escape religious
persecution. They boarded a ship and sailed to Holland in the
Netherlands. In Holland the people enjoyed a brief time free
from the religious persecution they faced back in England, but
they soon became frustrated with the Dutch peoples bad morals
and what they considered sinful lifestyles.
Seeking yet a better way of life, the Separatists made a deal
with a stock company in London to finance a trip to America on a
ship named the Mayflower. There were others from England that
were not separatists, in fact the majority that made the trip on
the Mayflower were not.
The group arrived in America on Dec 11, 1620 and they set ground
at Plymouth, Massachusetts. The first winter season the pilgrims
encountered in America was horrible. With extreme cold and
blizzard conditions, they lost 46 of the original 102 who came
over on the Mayflower. But the spring and summer of the next
year was wonderful with most of the days pleasant and nice and
most of the pilgrims staying healthy. The local indians showed
them where and how to hunt and trap for the available game, and
shared their secrets on growing and storing of the native crops.
The harvest of 1621 was very bountiful and the pilgrims along
with the local indians who had helped them survive their first
year, decided to have a huge feast to celebrate and give thanks.
The feast or as it's commonly called 'The First Thanksgiving'
was probably held outside on handmade tables and benches, most
of the people sat on blankets on the ground while eating,
because records show that the colonists didn't have a building
large enough to accommodate all the people.
From an original letter of a member of the colony, Edward
Winslow, here is the actual account of the First Thanksgiving
celebration:
"Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on
fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice
together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They
four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help
beside, served the company almost a week. At which time, amongst
other recreations, we exercised our arms, Many of the Indians
coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest King
Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we
entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer,
which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our
governor, and upon the captain and others. And although it be
not always so plentiful as it was this time with us, yet by the
goodness of God, we are so far from want that we often wish you
partakers of our plenty."
From the hand written letter we can see that 1 Indian Chief or
King and 90 others (91 total indians) that were invited as
guests attended the event along with the pilgrims, and that the
feast or celebration lasted 3 days. The celebration or feast was
not repeated again until the year 1623, when during a severe
drought the pilgrims all gathered and prayed for rain. The next
day, a long steady rain occurred, and Governor Bradford
proclaimed another day of Thanksgiving, and again the pilgrims
or 'colonists' invited their indian friends to celebrate.
The next Thanksgiving celebration did not occur until the year
1676, when the governing council of Charlestown, Massachusetts,
held a meeting on the best way to celebrate and give thanks for
the good fortune their community had experienced. By voting,
they instructed Edward Rawson, the clerk, to proclaim June 29th
as a day of Thanksgiving.
Other dates that were important to the Thanksgiving Holiday were
October of the year 1777, when there was a Thanksgiving holiday
that was celebrated by all 13 colonies that had been
established. In 1789 George Washington proclaimed a national day
of Thanksgiving, and after a campaign of letter writing to
presidents and governors, in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln
proclaimed the last Thursday in November as a national day of
Thanksgiving. The date was altered a couple more times, but
finaly in 1941 it was sanctioned by Congress as a legal holiday,
on the fourth Thursday in November, where it remains yet today.
By Robert W. Benjamin
Copyright © 2005
About the Author: Robert W. Benjamin has been in the software
business on the internet for over 5 years, and has been
producing low-cost software for the past 25+ years. He first
released products on the AMIGA and C64 computer systems in the
late 1970's-80's. RB59.COM Software http://www.rb59.com/software
Source: www.isnare.com
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