Thanksgiving Trivia
Thanksgiving may be America’s
most beloved national holiday, but its history is all over the place. Even the
details of the famous feast between the Plymouth Colony settlers and the
Wampanoag Indians in November of 1621 are sketchy. The best account we have is
a letter from English settler Edward Winslow that never mentions the word
“Thanksgiving,” but tells of a weeklong harvest celebration that included a
three-day celebration with King Massasoit and 90 Wampanoag men “so we might
after a more special manner rejoice together.” Over the centuries, that
briefly-mentioned feast week has taken on a life of its own, with each
generation adding its own take on the fall tradition. We’ve pulled together
some little-known trivia so you have something to talk about (other than politics)
around the Thanksgiving dinner table this November.
Where was the first
Thanksgiving? Colonists and
Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast in 1621 in Plymouth,
Massachusetts that is widely acknowledged as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations.
But some historians argue that Florida, not Massachusetts, may have been the
true site of the first Thanksgiving in North America. In 1565, nearly 60 years
before Plymouth, a Spanish fleet came ashore and planted a cross in the sandy
beach to christen the new settlement of St. Augustine. To celebrate the arrival
and give thanks for God’s providence, the 800 Spanish settlers shared a festive
meal with the native Timucuan people. Read more.
What did they eat at the first
Thanksgiving? The Thanksgiving meal
in Plymouth probably had little in common with today’s traditional holiday
spread. Although turkeys were indigenous, there’s no record of a big, roasted
bird at the feast. The Wampanoag brought deer and there would have been lots of
local seafood (mussels, lobster, bass) plus the fruits of the first pilgrim
harvest, including pumpkin. No mashed potatoes, though. Potatoes had only been
recently shipped back to Europe from South America. Read more.
When did America first call
for a national Thanksgiving? America
first called for a national day of thanksgiving to celebrate victory over the
British in the Battle of Saratoga. In 1789, George Washington again called for
national day of thanks on the last Thursday of November in 1777 to commemorate
the end of the Revolutionary War and the ratification of the Constitution. And
during the Civil War, both the Confederacy and the Union issued Thanksgiving
Day proclamations following major victories.
Which president refused to
recognize Thanksgiving? Thomas
Jefferson was famously the only Founding Father and early president who refused
to declare days of thanksgiving and fasting in the United States. Unlike his
political rivals, the Federalists, Jefferson believed in “a wall of separation
between Church and State” and believed that endorsing such celebrations as
president would amount to a state-sponsored religious worship. Read more.
What does the poem, 'Mary had
a little lamb,' have to do with Thanksgiving? The first official proclamation of a
national Thanksgiving holiday didn’t come until 1863, when President Abraham
Lincoln called for an annual Thanksgiving celebration on the final Thursday in
November. The proclamation was the result of years of impassioned lobbying by
"Mary Had a Little Lamb" author and abolitionist Sarah Josepha Hale.
Read more.
How long has pumpkin pie been
a traditional part of Thanksgiving? Pumpkin
pie was a staple on New England Thanksgiving tables as far back as the turn of
the 18th century. Legend has it that the Connecticut town of Colchester
postponed its Thanksgiving feast for a week in 1705 due to a molasses shortage.
There could simply be no Thanksgiving without pumpkin pie. Read more.
When did we start canning
cranberries? Cranberries were eaten
by Native Americans and used as a potent red dye, but sweetened cranberry
relish was almost certainly not on the first Thanksgiving table. The pilgrims
had long exhausted their sugar supply by November 1621. Marcus Urann canned the
first jellied cranberry sauce in 1912 and eventually founded the cranberry
growers cooperative known as Ocean Spray.
How did a botched Thanksgiving
order lead to the TV tray dinner? In
1953, an employee at C.A. Swanson & Sons overestimated demand for Thanksgiving
turkey and the company was left with some 260 tons of extra frozen birds. As a
solution, Smithsonian reports, a Swanson salesman ordered 5,000 aluminum trays,
devised a turkey meal and recruited an assembly line of workers to compile what
would become the first TV tray dinners. A culinary hit was born. In the first
full year of production, 1954, the company sold 10 million turkey TV tray
dinners.
Why is football a Thanksgiving
tradition? The winning combo of
football and Thanksgiving kicked off way before there was anything called the
NFL. The first Thanksgiving football game was a college match between Yale and
Princeton in 1876, only 13 years after Lincoln made Thanksgiving a national
holiday. Soon after, Thanksgiving was picked for the date of the college
football championships. By the 1890s, thousands of college and high school
football rivalries were played every Thanksgiving. Read more.
Who was the first president to
pardon a turkey? Starting in the
1940s, farmers would gift the president with some plump birds for roast turkey
over the holidays, which the first family would invariably eat. While President
John F. Kennedy was the first American president to spare a turkey’s life
(“We’ll just let this one grow,” JFK quipped in 1963. “It’s our Thanksgiving
present to him.”) the annual White House tradition of “pardoning” a turkey
officially started with George H.W. Bush in 1989.
Which president received a
raccoon as a Thanksgiving gift? In
1926, President Calvin Coolidge received a somewhat odd Thanksgiving gift in
the form of a live raccoon. Meant to be eaten (the Mississippi man who sent it
called raccoon meat “toothsome”), the Coolidge family adopted the pet and named
it Rebecca. Rebecca was only the latest addition to their already substantial White
House menagerie that included a black bear, a wallaby, and a pygmy hippo named
Billy. Read more.
When was the first Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade? To
celebrate the expansion of its Herald Square superstore, Macy’s announced its
very first “Big Christmas Parade” two weeks before Thanksgiving in 1924,
promising “magnificent floats,” bands and an “animal circus.” A huge success,
Macy’s trimmed the parade route from six miles to two miles and signed a TV
contract with NBC to broadcast the now famous Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
See video.
When did the Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade start featuring balloons? The first oversized balloons debuted in the
Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade in 1927. The brainchild of Anthony Frederick Sarg, a
German-born puppeteer and theatrical designer who also created Macy’s
fantastical Christmas window displays, the first balloons were filled with
oxygen, not helium. That year they featured Felix the Cat and inflated animals
like elephants, tigers and a giant hummingbird. See photos.
Which president tried to move
the date of Thanksgiving and why? Concerned
that the Christmas shopping season was cut short by a late Thanksgiving,
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt decreed in 1939 that Thanksgiving would be
celebrated a week earlier. “Franksgiving,” as it was known, was decried by
Thanksgiving traditionalists and political rivals (one even compared FDR to
Hitler) and was only adopted by 23 of the 48 states. Congress officially moved
Thanksgiving back to the fourth Thursday of November in 1941, where it has
remained ever since.
https://www.history.com/news/thanksgiving-history-trivia-facts
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