The True
Thanksgiving Story
By
Dennis Rupert
It seems that every
year we are treated to articles attempting to disprove the “myth of
Thanksgiving.” In these articles we are told that: The Pilgrims weren’t the
first people in America to hold a thanksgiving; That
the first thanksgiving had no religious significance at all, but was merely a
harvest festival; That our traditional Thanksgiving dinner has nothing in
common with the Pilgrim’s meal. Some of
these accusations are not a serious concern. After all, who cares if the
Pilgrims served cranberries or not? But what seems to lie behind some of these
articles is a desire to devalue the religious nature of our present
Thanksgiving holiday. This is unfortunate since Thanksgiving is one of the few
holidays on the America calendar that is not swept away with commercialism or
mixed with pagan elements.
So here is ‘The
True Thanksgiving Story.’ We have included references to primary sources which
you can read for yourself. After reading I believe that you will still be able
to eat your turkey with a happy stomach and a grateful heart to God.
Who Observed the First
Thanksgiving?
Okay, it wasn’t the
Pilgrims. Of course, native Americans celebrated
many thanksgiving festivals before Europeans ever arrived in America. For
example, the Wampanoag (Indian allies of the Pilgrims) held
six
thanksgiving festivals during the year.
The first recorded
Christian thanksgiving in America occurred in Texas on May 23, 1541 when
Spanish explorer, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, and his men held a service of
thanksgiving after finding food, water, and pasture for their animals in the
Panhandle.
Another
thanksgiving service occurred on June 30, 1564 when French Huguenot colonists
celebrated in solemn praise and thanksgiving in a settlement near what is now
Jacksonville, Florida.
On August 9, 1607
English settlers led by Captain George Popham joined Abnaki Indians along Maine’s Kennebec River for a harvest
feast and prayer meeting. The colonists, living under the Plymouth Company charter,
established Fort St. George around the same time as the founding of Virginia’s
Jamestown colony. Unlike Jamestown, however, this site was abandoned a year
later.
Two years before
the Pilgrims on December 4, 1619, a group of 38 English settlers arrived at
Berkeley Plantation in what is now Charles City, Virginia. The group’s charter
required that the day of arrival be observed yearly as a day of thanksgiving to
God. Captain John Woodleaf held the service of
thanksgiving. Here is the section of the Charter of Berkley Plantation which
specifies the thanksgiving service: “Wee ordaine that
the day of our ships arrival at the place assigned for plantacon
in the land of Virginia shall be yearly and perpetually keept
holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty god.”
In addition to
1619, the colonists perhaps held services in 1620 and 1621. The colony was
wiped out in 1622. It was a private event, limited to the Berkeley settlement.
Thus Spanish,
French and British colonists held several Thanksgiving services in America
before the Pilgrim’s celebration in 1621. Most of these early thanksgivings did
not involve feasting. They were religious in nature, i.e. worship services of
thankfulness to God.
What About the Pilgrim’s
Thanksgiving?
In a children’s
book called The First Thanksgiving, the author, Jean Craighead George
says, the Pilgrims left Europe “to seek their fortune in the New World.” (1)
That would have come as news to the Pilgrims themselves. Pilgrim leader William
Bradford wrote in his diary that the voyage was motivated by “a great hope for
advancing the kingdom of Christ.”
The Pilgrims set
aground at Plymouth Rock on December 11, 1620. Their first winter was
devastating. Weakened by the seven-week crossing and the need to establish
housing, they came down with pneumonia and consumption. They began to die --
one per day, then two, and sometimes three. They dug the graves at night, so
that the Indians would not see how their numbers were dwindling. At one point,
there were only seven persons able to fetch wood, make fires, and care for the
sick. By the spring, they had lost 46 of the original 102 who sailed on the Mayflower. (2)
The Pilgrims
obviously needed help and it came from an English-speaking member of the
Wampanoag Nation, Squanto. Squanto
decided to stay with the Pilgrims for the next few months and teach them how to
survive. He brought them food and skins, taught them how to cultivate new
vegetables and how to build Indian-style houses. He educated the Pilgrims on
poisonous plants, medicine, how to get sap from the maple trees, use fish for
fertilizer, and dozens of other skills needed for their survival.
The harvest of 1621
was a bountiful one and the remaining colonists decided to celebrate with a
feast. The author of The First Thanksgiving states, “This was not a day
of Pilgrim thanksgiving.” Instead, she writes, “This was pure celebration.” (3)
This is the type of subtle statement that often occurs in reading about the
Pilgrim’s first thanksgiving. It is not based on factual history, however. One
can only guess at the motives of people who write such things, but statements
like this appear to be motivated by a desire to rob the event of any religious
meaning.
It is quite true
that the word “thanksgiving” is not used in referring to the feast. Much is
made of this by secular authors who attempt to reinterpret the Pilgrim
thanksgiving. But the only letter that we have telling us about the first
Thanksgiving praises God for the harvest, makes reference to the “goodness of
God” in providing for them, and says that the feast was held so that they “might
after a special manner rejoice together.” (4) That sounds like
a Thanksgiving feast to me!
The event occurred
between September 21 and November 11, 1621, with the most likely time being
around Michaelmas (September 29), the traditional
time for English harvest homes. The settlers asked
Squanto
and the leader of the Wampanoags, Massasoit,
to bring their immediate family and to dine with them. The English had no
idea how large Indian families could be and Squanto
and Massasoit arrived accompanied by 90 relatives. The feast lasted
three days. The Pilgrims and Indians ate outdoors at large tables and competed
together in tests of skill and strength. (5)
Governor William
Bradford sent “four men fowling” after wild ducks, geese, and turkey. (6) The
warriors brought five deer. The feast probably consisted of the following items
(constructed from original sources and historical research by the Plimoth Plantation): Seethed [boiled] Lobster, Roasted
Goose, Boiled Turkey, Fricase of Coney, Pudding of
Indian Corn Meal with dried Whortleberries, Seethed Cod, Roasted Duck, Stewed
Pumpkin, Roasted Venison with Mustard Sauce, Savory Pudding of Hominy, Fruit
and Holland Cheese.
Were
There Other Thanksgiving Feasts Held by the Pilgrims?
The Pilgrim’s first
thanksgiving feast was not repeated the following year. In the third year, when
many of them had become preoccupied with cultivating more land, and building on
to their houses, and planting extra corn for trading with the Indians, they
were stricken by a prolonged drought. Week followed week with no rain, until
even the Indians had no recollection of such a thing ever happening before. The
sun-blasted corn withered on its stalks and became tinder dry, and beneath it the
ground cracked open and was so powdery that any normal rain would be of little
use. And still the heavens were as brass.
Finally, in July,
Governor Bradford called a council of the chief men. It was obvious that God
was withholding the rain for a reason, and they had better find out why.
Bradford declared a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer, and they gathered
in their blockhouse church and began to search their hearts. It turned out that
even these ‘saints’, had things to repent for -- spiritual pride, jealousy,
vindictiveness, and greed, as well as a number of broken relationships. One
after another, as they became convicted, they asked God’s forgiveness and that
of their fellow Pilgrims.
A tender, peaceful
spirit grew among them and was enhanced as each hour passed. Late in the
afternoon, as they emerged from the blockhouse, the sky which that morning had
been hard and clear (as it had been every morning for nearly two months), was
now covered with clouds all around them. The following morning, it began to
rain -- a gentle rain that continued on and off for fourteen days straight.
Writing of it, Bradford said: “It came, without either wind, or thunder, or any
violence, and by degreese in yt abundance, as that ye earth was thorowly wete and soked therwith. Which did so
apparently revive & quicken ye decayed corne
& other fruits, as was wonderfull to see, and
made ye Indeans astonished to behold; and afterwards
the Lord sent them shuch seasonable showers, with enterchange of faire warme
weather, as, through His blessing, caused a fruitfull
& liberall harvest, to their no small comforte and rejoycing.”
Their harvest that fall, was so abundant that they ended up with a
surplus -- to the benefit of Indians to the north who had not had a good
growing season. To everyone’s delight, the Governor “sett
aparte a day of thanksgiveing”
and apparently once again invited Chief Massasoit and
his braves to eat with them. (7)
A generation later,
after the balance of power had shifted to the English settlers, the Indian
and White children of that first Thanksgiving were striving to kill each other
in the conflict known as King Philip’s War. The settlers prevailed and in
June of 1676 another Day of Thanksgiving was proclaimed. The governing council
of Charlestown, Massachusetts, held a meeting to determine how best to express
thanks for the victories in “Warr with the Heathen
Natives of this land.” By unanimous vote they instructed Edward Rawson, the
clerk, to proclaim June 29 as a day of thanksgiving. The following is part
of that proclamation: “The Council has thought meet to appoint and set apart
the 29th day of this instant June, as a day of Solemn Thanksgiving and praise
to God for such his Goodness and Favour, many Particulars
of which mercy might be Instanced, but we doubt not those who are sensible
of God’s Afflictions, have been as diligent to espy him returning to us; and
that the Lord may behold us as a People offering Praise
and
thereby glorifying Him; the Council doth commend it to the Respective Ministers,
Elders and people of this Jurisdiction; Solemnly and seriously to keep the
same Beseeching that being persuaded by the mercies of God we may all, even
this whole people offer up our bodies and souls as a living and acceptable
Service unto God by Jesus Christ.”
Was Thanksgiving Practiced
During the Early Days of the United States?
December 18, 1777
marked the first time that all 13 colonies joined in a thanksgiving
celebration. It commemorated the patriotic victory over the British at
Saratoga: “It is therefore recommended by Congress, that Thursday the 18th day
of December next be set apart for Solemn Thanksgiving and Praise; that at one
time, and with one voice, the good people may express the grateful feelings of
their hearts, and consecrate themselves to the service of their divine
benefactor; and that, together with their sincere acknowledgements and
offerings they may join the penitent confession of their sins; and
supplications for such further blessings as they stand in need of.”
President George Washington
proclaimed a National Day of Thanksgiving for November 26, 1789 to honor the
formation of the United States government. His proclamation called for a day of
prayer and giving thanks to God. It was to be celebrated by all religious
denominations, but discord among the colonies prevented it from being practiced
by all the States. Washington wrote in his November 26th diary entry: “Being
the day appointed for a thanksgiving I went to St. Paul’s Chapel though it was
most inclement and stormy--but few people at Church.” President Washington
later provided money, food, and beer to debtors spending the holiday in a New
York City jail.
Thanksgiving failed
to become an annual tradition at this time. Only Presidents Washington, Adams,
and Madison declared national days of thanks in their terms. Thomas Jefferson
and John Quincy Adams considered the practice to infringe upon the separation
of church and state.
During the War of
1812, President Madison proclaimed three days of fasting and prayer in response
to Congressional requests (August 20, 1812, September 9, 1813, and January 12,
1815). He was the last president to call for a national thanksgiving until
Abraham Lincoln in 1863. Governors, on the other hand--particularly in the New
England States, regularly issued proclamations of thanksgiving.
How Did Thanksgiving Become
a Yearly National Practice?
It was Sarah Josepha Hale, a magazine editor, whose efforts eventually
led to what we recognize as Thanksgiving. Hale wrote many editorials
championing her cause in her Boston Ladies’ Magazine, and later, in Godey’s Lady’s Book. She was fired with the
determination of having the whole nation join together in setting apart a
national day for giving thanks “unto Him from who all blessings flow.”
In 1830, New York proclaimed
an official State “Thanksgiving Day.” Other States soon followed its example.
The Territory of Minnesota celebrated its first Thanksgiving Day on December
26, 1850. The whole territory, including all of what is now the State of
Minnesota plus the Dakotas as far west as the Missouri River, contained
approximately 6,000 settlers but the book,
The Frontier Holiday, describes a spirited celebration. Territory Governor,
Alexander Ramsey, proclaimed the day of thanks: “Young in years as a community,
we have come into the wilderness, in the midst of savage men and uncultivated
nature to found a new empire in aid of our pursuit of happiness,
and to extend the area of enlightened republican Liberty.... Let us in the
public temple of religion, by the fireside and family altar, on the prairie and
in the forest, join in the expression of our gratitude, of our devotion to the
God Who brought our fathers safely through the perils of an early revolution,
and Who thus continues His favors to the remotest colonies of His sons.”
By 1852, Hale’s campaign
succeeded in uniting 29 States in marking the last Thursday of November as “Thanksgiving
Day.”
Finally, after a
40-year campaign of writing editorials and letters to governors and presidents,
Hale’s passion became a reality. On September 28, 1863, Sarah Josepha Hale wrote a letter to President Lincoln and urged
him to have the “day of our annual Thanksgiving made a National and fixed Union
Festival.” On October 3, 1863, President Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in
November as a national day “of Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent
Father.” Here is the text of Lincoln’s proclamation:
By the President of the United
States of America.
A Proclamation.
The year that is drawing
towards its close, has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and
healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are
prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which
are of so extraordinary a nature, that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften
even the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever watchful providence
of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequaled magnitude and
severity, which has sometimes seemed to foreign States to invite and to provoke
their aggression, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been
maintained, the laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed
everywhere except in the theatre of military conflict; while that theatre has
been greatly contracted by the advancing armies and navies of the Union.
Needful diversions of wealth and of strength from the fields of peaceful
industry to the national defence, have not arrested
the plough, the shuttle or the ship; the axe has enlarged the borders of our
settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as of the precious metals,
have yielded even more abundantly than heretofore. Population has steadily
increased, notwithstanding the waste that has been made in the camp, the siege
and the battle-field; and the country, rejoicing in the consiousness
of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect continuance of years
with large increase of freedom. No human counsel hath devised nor hath any
mortal hand worked out these great things. They are the gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in anger for our
sins, hath nevertheless remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper
that they should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with
one heart and one voice by the whole American People. I do therefore invite my
fellow citizens in every part of the United States, and also those who are at
sea and those who are sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and observe the
last Thursday of November next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Praise to our
beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens. And I
recommend to them that while offering up the ascriptions justly due to Him for
such singular deliverances and blessings, they do also, with humble penitence
for our national perverseness and disobedience, commend to His tender care all
those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable
civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the
interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to
restore it as soon as may be consistent with the Divine purposes to the full
enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquillity and Union. (8)
Lincoln issued a similar
proclamation in 1864. U.S. presidents maintained the holiday on the last Thursday
of November for 75 years (with the exception of Andrew Johnson designating
the first Thursday in
December
as Thanksgiving Day 1865 and Ulysses Grant choosing the third Thursday for
Thanksgiving Day 1869).
In 1939, President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared the next-to-last Thursday of the month
(November 23rd) to be Thanksgiving Day. This break with tradition was prompted
by requests from the National Retail Dry Goods Association. Since 1939 had five
Thursdays in November, this would create a longer Christmas shopping season.
While governors usually followed the president’s lead with State proclamations
for the same day, on this year, twenty-three States observed Thanksgiving Day
on November 23rd, the ‘Democratic’ Thanksgiving. Twenty-three States celebrated
on November 30th, Lincoln’s ‘Republican’ Thanksgiving. Texas and Colorado
declared both Thursdays to be holidays.
After two years of
public outcry and confusion, Congress introduced the legislation to ensure that
future presidential proclamations could not impact the scheduling of the
holiday. They established Thanksgiving Day as the fourth Thursday in November.
The legislation took effect in 1942. Their plan to designate the fourth
Thursday of the month allowed Thanksgiving Day to fall on the last Thursday
five out of seven years.
Thanksgiving and Christians
There are those who
want to remove any thought of God from our Thanksgiving celebrations. They wish
to secularize the holiday and they reinvent history to attempt to prove their
point. But it is evident from reading primary sources that Thanksgiving in
America was always about giving thanks to God.
It is a Christian
command and privilege to be grateful for the blessings of God (Deuteronomy 8:10; Psalm 107:19,21; Colossians 1:12-14; Philippians
1:3). Our Thanksgiving celebration is a wonderful reminder to “give thanks
to the Lord, for He is good. His love endures forever” (1 Chronicles 16:34).
The Rev. Benjamin
Arnett was a prominent African American cleric in the Ohio AME Church. He
preached a Thanksgiving sermon during the centennial of our nation on November
30, 1876. His sermon is a beautiful expression of gratitude to God for national
blessings and a call to continue to pursue righteousness for ourselves and our
nation (Proverbs 14:34):
“Following the
tracks of righteousness throughout the centuries and along the way of nations,
we are prepared to recommend it to all and assert without a shadow of doubt,
that ‘Righteousness exalted a nation’; but on the other hand following the
foot-prints of sin amid the ruins of Empires and remains of cities, we will say
that ‘sin is a reproach to any people.’ But we call on all American citizens to
love their country, and look not on the sins of the past, but arming ourselves
for the conflict of the future, girding ourselves in the habiliments of
Righteousness, march forth with the courage of a Numidian
lion and with the confidence of a Roman Gladiator, and meet the demands of the
age, and satisfy the duties of the hour. Let us be encouraged in our work, for
we have found the moccasin track of Righteousness all along the shore of the
stream of life, constantly advancing holding humanity with a firm hand. We have
seen it ‘through’ all the confusion of rising and falling States, of battle,
siege and slaughter, of victory and defeat; through the varying fortunes and
ultimate extinctions of Monarchies, Republics and Empires; through barbaric
irruption and desolation, feudal isolation, spiritual supremacy, the heroic
rush and conflict of the Cross and Crescent; amid the busy hum of industry,
through the marts of trade and behind the gliding keels of commerce. And in
America, the battle-field of modern thought, we can trace the foot-prints of
the one and the tracks of the other. So let us use all of our available forces,
and especially our young men, and throw them into the conflict of the Right
against the Wrong. Then let the grand Centennial Thanksgiving song be heard and
sung in every house of God; and in every home may thanksgiving sounds be heard,
for our race has been emancipated, enfranchised and are now educating, and have
the Gospel preached to them!”
References
(1) Jean Craighead
George, The First Thanksgiving, (New
York: Philomel Books, 1993).
(2) Of Plimoth Plantation by William Bradford, original
manuscript, written 1647, (1901 Edition).
(3) Jean Craighead
George, The First Thanksgiving., (New York: Philomel Books, 1993).
(4) Edward Winslow’s
letter, written December 11, 1621.
(5) Edward Winslow’s
letter, written December 11, 1621.
(6) William Bradford’s comments about the harvest from Of Plimoth Plantation by William Bradford.
(7) Of Plimoth Plantation by William Bradford, original
manuscript, written 1647, (1901 Edition).
(8) The Collected
Works of Abraham Lincoln, edited by Roy P. Basler.
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Dennis Rupert is a pastor of New Life Community
Church, a non-denominational church in Stafford, VA. Pastor Rupert can be reached by calling
(540) 659-5356 or (540) 659-7333 or via email at dennis.rupert@new-life.net.
This article is from New Life’s
website (www.new-life.net) Holiday page, which contains a wealth of information
regarding the holidays of Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter.