This blog entry was originally posted on November 20, 2015.
The Pilgrims started their first colony in Plymouth, MA, in 1620. They endured a year of near starvation but somehow built homes, storage areas and even a church. During the second year, their farms provided a bountiful harvest, mostly due to the help and advice from the local Native Americans.
The Pilgrims started their first colony in Plymouth, MA, in 1620. They endured a year of near starvation but somehow built homes, storage areas and even a church. During the second year, their farms provided a bountiful harvest, mostly due to the help and advice from the local Native Americans.
In
November, 1621, the pioneers, in what would become known as the American
Colonies, celebrated their bountiful harvest before the cold, fall season set
in. Their impromptu celebration set the precedent for our annual celebration of
Thanksgiving.
About
50 Pilgrims and 90 Wampanoag Indians got together some time that November. The
exact date is unknown. A strict religious group, the Pilgrims believed that a
thanksgiving was a gathering that included prayers and worship. But even then,
the food played a major role in their celebration.
The
first Thanksgiving lasted about three days. Their guests, the Wampanoag
Indians, slept outside when the Pilgrims went into their homes to rest after
each day of eating and celebrating. The women dutifully cooked and served the
food to the celebrants, but the female Pilgrims were prohibited from joining
the male partygoers who exchanged gifts and played games.
The
women boiled vegetables, roasted meats and baked bread in their ovens. A
delicious smell probably drifted over the primitive encampment as the women
carried the food among the party goers. The women served the men and darted
back to their open fires to continue their cooking chores. For many of the women, it was the first time
they made close contact with Indians. Some of them were fascinated with being
near a group of people foreign to them. Others were afraid to interact with the
Indians. We can speculate that the women probably talked among themselves and
decided that the hard work they had to do would stop them from inviting
Thanksgiving guests the next year.
Nothing
was recorded about the food that was consumed during the first Thanksgiving.
But historians can surmise what the menu might have been by knowing what food
sources were available to the settlers. Researchers
often conclude that turkey, our staple on Thanksgiving tables, was not part of
the meal the Pilgrims had. However, wild turkey was plentiful in Massachusetts
in the 1600s. The Pilgrims and Indians undoubtedly ate turkey as part of the
feast. Turkeys, roasted over open fires, weren’t stuffed with spices and bread
crumbs back then. With turkey, they also ate duck and other migrating fowl.
Pies,
fruit pies as we know them, weren’t part of the staples the Pilgrims ate. The
pie they knew in England was typically a meat pie and similar to what we call
today a pot pie. It would have been too complicated for the Pilgrims to bake. Pumpkins
grew wild, but they weren’t part of the Pilgrims’ food group, thus eliminating
pumpkin pie from the menu. Wild
duck was plentiful and a popular food. They also ate roots, squash, carrots,
peas and corn. The Pilgrims grew all these vegetables with the knowledge they
learned from the Wampanoags. Migrating fowl of several types were eaten at the
feast. Staples such as walnuts and chestnuts came from the forest. Fresh
corn wasn’t available in the cold autumn. Only dried corn was possible to be
used on the Thanksgiving menu. The Wampanoags probably provided a favorite of
theirs called sobaheg. It’s a stewed mix of dried corn, roots, beans, squash
and chunks of meat. Cranberries
were available, but only in their natural form. Cranberry sauce and mashed potatoes weren’t invented yet. The friendly Indians probably provided several
deer to the original feast. Venison was readily available. It was a favorite
food for the locals and the Pilgrims and an important source of protein in
their agrarian diets.
President
Abraham Lincoln made the first attempt to make Thanksgiving a holiday. He
proclaimed it a national day of celebration in 1861. Lincoln hoped that the
holiday would help unify the country at the beginning of the Civil War. The 16th
president ordered government offices closed on the fourth Thursday of November
to celebrate Thanksgiving. On October 3, 1863, the holiday became an official
national observance.
In 1939, politics
motivated President Franklin D. Roosevelt to move the holiday to the third Thursday of November, to encourage citizens to begin their Christmas shopping one week earlier. The country was ending its worst economic decade. Roosevelt proclaimed
the date change to help strengthen the weak economy.
On December 26, 1941, just 19 days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor that pushed the United States into World War II, the U.S. Congress moved Thanksgiving to its permanent place on the fourth Thursday of November. That change to the original date worked to calm a very nervous population that was facing participation in a world-wide conflict.
Thanksgiving
often is considered the favorite national holiday. It doesn’t bring the
pressure of buying gifts to exchange with family and friends but focuses on time spent with family. Today, turkey is the main course for most of Thanksgiving meals in the United States. According to a CNN poll, 46 million turkeys will be baked, grilled or fried this month.
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