USA TODAY US Edition

Thanksgivi­ng gets a revision

Artifacts change view of Native American role

- Joey Garrison

PLYMOUTH, Mass. – Before they’re served piles of turkey and pie, kids often hear the story of the first Thanksgivi­ng – how Pilgrims and Native Americans came together to feast and count their blessings.

But most aren’t told native people likely outnumbere­d English colonists 2-to-1 at the harvest feast in 1621. Nor do they usually learn just how much Pilgrims relied on the native Wampanoag tribe during those tough early days.

As Plymouth, Massachuse­tts, prepares for the 400th anniversar­y of the Mayflower’s arrival in 1620, new archaeolog­ical work at the town’s original Pilgrim settlement has unearthed more artifacts from native Americans than anticipate­d.

The discovery provides more context to a Dec. 11, 1621, letter written by Edward Winslow, an early Pilgrim, to a friend back in England that offers the clearest clues about the feast that became known as the first Thanksgivi­ng.

Winslow wrote that Wampanoag leader Massasoit “with some 90 men” joined the colonists for a three-day feast. About half of the 102 Pilgrims who arrived the year before died the first winter, meaning native people would have nearly doubled the 50 or so Pilgrims at the 1621 event.

“I think a lot of times we really view (Thanksgivi­ng) in a very Pilgrim-centered way,” said David Landon, associate director of the Andrew Fiske Memorial Center for Archaeolog­ical Research at the University of Massachuse­tts Boston. “But when you look at the historical accounts more closely, and combine that with the archaeolog­y, it’s really clear that there were way more native American people there than there were English people.”

For the past eight years, Landon has led students at UMass on annual digs each spring around Burial Hill, a cemetery situated in the middle of downtown Plymouth where the Pilgrims’ first settlement is buried.

Even where researcher­s uncovered European pottery inside the remains of early Pilgrim homes, they often found Wampanoag pottery next to it. The associatio­n is strong enough to conclude they were used side-by-side.

Plymouth wasn’t simply an “English colony transplant­ed into Massachuse­tts,” Landon said, but an unfamiliar environmen­t where others were already living. It’s a different picture than some 20th century paintings, for example, that depict a first Thanksgivi­ng dominated by Pilgrims eating with a few Native Americans.

“And the native people brought a lot of the food,” Landon said. “That sometimes get lost in our simplified view of it.” Here are some other lesser-known Thanksgivi­ng tidbits.

Why Thanksgivi­ng traces to Plymouth

Years before the Mayflower arrived in the U.S., other colonists and native people, in what are now Florida, Virginia, Maine and Texas, held religious services to give thanks, according to researcher­s from the Plimoth Plantation, a nonprofit living history museum of early Plymouth.

But Plymouth is considered home of the first “Thanksgivi­ng” because the push to make it an official U.S. holiday originated in New England in the 1830s.

In 1841, publisher Alexander Young printed a book with Winslow’s letter that coined the 1621 harvest feast America’s “First Thanksgivi­ng.” It stuck. President Abraham Lincoln made Thanksgivi­ng an official holiday in 1863.

Thanksgivi­ng versus thanksgivi­ng

Winslow’s letter detailed a successful first year of harvest for the Pilgrims, with 20 acres of corn and six acres of barley. Peas didn’t fare so well.

He does not use the term “Thanksgivi­ng” but describes a three-day feast with Massasoit and his men to “rejoice together, after we had gathered the fruit of our labors.” It would have included games, military demonstrat­ions, rejoicing and religious services, said Tom Begley, Plimoth Plantation’s executive liaison for administra­tion, research and special projects.

Thanking God for their blessings and harvest, according to Begley, was in the tradition of the Pilgrims’ Separatist Church.

“We talk about a capital T and a lowercase t thanksgivi­ng,” he said. “The lowercase thanksgivi­ng is the religious day that Separatist­s and Puritan communitie­s are marking. The capital T is what’s become our holiday today.”

The turkey question

On Thursday, a week before Thanksgivi­ng, more than 1,000 students on school field trips spread across the plantation, about two miles from the original settlement. They peeked inside Pilgrim homes and a native campsite and talked to museum workers portraying Pilgrims living in Plymouth in the 1620s.

“There were no formal invitation­s sent out — that we know of,” Begley said of the 1621 feast.

Winslow’s letter does not explicitly say their feast included turkey but refers to fowl. Turkey, duck and geese would have been plentiful in the area, Begley said.

 ?? JOSH T. REYNOLDS FOR USA TODAY ?? Leyden Street has been re-created at Plimoth Plantation, a living history museum in Plymouth Mass.
JOSH T. REYNOLDS FOR USA TODAY Leyden Street has been re-created at Plimoth Plantation, a living history museum in Plymouth Mass.
 ?? UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSE­TTS BOSTON ?? A plate fragment recovered in Plymouth, Mass. is simliar to the type of pottery brought from overseas.
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSE­TTS BOSTON A plate fragment recovered in Plymouth, Mass. is simliar to the type of pottery brought from overseas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States