11 Thanksgiving Fun Facts
You'll Want To Share On Turkey Day
As you're sharing what you're
grateful for, stuffing your face, dodging those uncomfortable
marriage/children/job questions, and/or watching football on Turkey Day, why
not throw in a few fun facts to really get the party started? Because yes,
everyone in the U.S. is familiar with the history of the first Thanksgiving (at
least, I hope). You know, when the pilgrims and members of the Wampanoag tribe
gathered in the Plymouth Colony to feast for three days in 1621 (if you didn't
know, now you know). But, surprise! There are a million and one other
fascinating things about the holiday. Here are some of the best pieces of info
to share throughout the day:
1. Historians are not actually
certain if turkey was eaten at the First Thanksgiving in 1621.
Not only that, but the first
Thanksgiving meal may not have actually been served. The "fowling"
they ate that day could have been other birds like "ducks, geese and
swans," which were also regularly eaten in the area.
2. The first Macy's Parade
used live animals from the Central Park Zoo.
According to AM New York and
other sources, the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade was originally called the
"Macy's Christmas Parade" to kick off the holiday shopping season. Held
in 1924, the first parade "included a menagerie of circus mainstays,
including monkeys, bears, camels, and elephants, all borrowed from the Central
Park Zoo."
3. Snoopy has appeared in the
Macy's Parade more than any other character balloon.
A Snoopy balloon made his debut
at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1968, making 39 appearances "on
and off through 2015" before he was replaced with Charlie Brown in 2016,
Mental Floss reports.
4. Sarah Josepha Hale was
actually the "Mother of Thanksgiving."
Sarah J. Hale, author of
"Mary Had a Little Lamb" and 19th-century writer and editor, was
nicknamed the Mother (or Godmother) of Thanksgiving after she wrote a letter to
President Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State William Seward in 1863, calling
for the declaration of Thanksgiving as a national holiday. Biography writes,
"[Lincoln] followed suit, ultimately leading to a fixed time of annual
celebration over the years."
5. "Jingle Bells"
was originally a Thanksgiving song.
I know, I know, this is wild. But
the James Pierpont's original 1857 song, then titled "One Horse Open
Sleigh," was originally composed for Thanksgiving. It became so popular
around Christmas though that in 1859 the title was changed to "Jingle
Bells."
6. Benjamin Franklin wished
the turkey was the national bird.
In a letter he wrote to his
daughter, Benjamin Franklin pens "For my own part I wish the Bald Eagle
had not been chosen the Representative of our Country... For the Truth the
Turkey is in Comparison a much more respectable Bird." There's actually a
song about this in 1776, the Tony-winning musical about the drafting of the
Declaration of Independence.
7. Butterball has had a Turkey
Talk-Line open every November through December for over 35 years.
Believe it or not, since 1981 Butterball
has been answering more than 100,000 turkey related questions for thousands of
homes in the U.S. and Canada every November to December. Yes, the Turkey
Talk-Line is real.
8. You're not tired from the
turkey's tryptophan.
Bad news: the real reason you're
tired is because you over-ate. In fact, Dr. Daniel Barone tells Business
Insider it's actually called "postprandial fatigue." Simply put, he
says this means "after you've had a big meal your body goes into basically
shutdown mode and sleep gets promoted."
9. The first professional
Thanksgiving Day football game was played 1920.
According to the Pro Football
Hall of Fame, the games played on Thanksgiving on November 25, 1920 included:
Akron Pros (7) vs. Canton
Bulldogs (0)
Decatur Staleys (6) vs. Chicago
Tigers (0)
Elyria (OH) Athletics* (0) vs.
Columbus Panhandles (0)
Dayton Triangles (28) vs. Detroit
Heralds (0)
Chicago Boosters* (27) vs.
Hammond Pros (0)
All-Tonawanda (NY) (14) vs.
Rochester Jeffersons (3)
10. The Wednesday before
Thanksgiving has come to be known "Drinksgiving" or "Black
Wednesday."
The night before Thanksgiving has
quickly become a night for drinking, where Uber prices surge, Business Insider
reports.
11. Black Friday, AKA the day
after Thanksgiving, is the busiest day for plumbers.
Plumbing and drain companies
don't really get the Friday after Thanksgiving off seeing as though it's
actually one of their busiest days of the year. In fact, it's so busy
Roto-Rooter Plumbing and Water Cleaning company actually calls it... well,
"Brown Friday."
https://www.housebeautiful.com/lifestyle/a22792044/thanksgiving-fun-facts/
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