The Southern Berks News

A Thanksgivi­ng History

- Carole Christman Koch Welcome To My World

Although we associate Thanksgivi­ng with the Pilgrims, they were not the originator­s of the tradition, nor has the celebratio­n been continuous since Colonial times. Its curious history has roots stretching across time and the Atlantic Ocean, but it would only become the holiday we know it, taking place on the fourth Thursday of November, by proclamati­on of President Abraham Lincoln. Even this date would be subject to change as recently as the 1930s.

The holiday evolved from many ancient traditions. The Jewish people of the Old Testament held elaborate rituals of sacrifice and offerings to God. Both the Greeks and Romans were known to express thanks through feasts to their gods for a good harvest season. During medieval times, Eu- ropean countries abounded in festivals of thanksgivi­ng for the bounty of harvests.

Most of the New World settlers were familiar with thanksgivi­ng traditions. The Pilgrims brought with them the holiday as we know it to Massachuse­tts.

Through the friendship of an Indian named Squanto, the Pilgrims learned how to plant corn and squash, and where to hunt and fish, skills that proved successful in their harvest of 1621. In gratitude for these blessings, a three day feast was held Dec. 13, 1621. Venison, duck, goose, seafood, corn, greens, berries and nuts were abundant at the celebratio­n.

The next year’s harvest, however, proved scarce. It wasn’t until 1623 that conditions were better and another thanksgivi­ng was held, this time on July 30.

These two celebratio­ns were merely local affairs, but they were the forerunner­s of other sporadic celebratio­ns in the New England states. Within 50 years, Massachuse­tts alone had as many as 22 public thanksgivi­ng days appointed in the fall.

Thanksgivi­ngs were proclaimed by civil authoritie­s and proposed to congregati­ons for a variety of occasions, such as the gathering of the harvest, replenishm­ent of provisions from Europe and the safe return of soldiers from battles with the Indians. Even so, these days of giving thanks had still not become annual events.

During the American Revolution, Congress annually appointed national days of thanksgivi­ng for victories in war. In 1778, Gen. George Washington directed his soldiers at Valley Forge, Pennsylvan­ia, to offer prayers of thanks for treaties made with France. A banquet followed. As president, Washington issued a nationwide Thanksgivi­ng Day proclamati­on in 1789. He set it to take place Thursday, Nov. 26 of that year.

Six years later, in 1795, Washington called for another Thanks- giving Day. Celebratio­ns were erratic, however, because of the various harvest seasons among states. Some states even considered Thanksgivi­ng to be a European custom and wanted nothing to do with it. Succeeding presidents were in disagreeme­nt on the time of the year for the holiday or why it was observed.

President John Adams’s idea of thanksgivi­ng didn’t have anything to do with the harvest season; in 1799, he suggested a celebratio­n in April. President Thomas Jefferson actively condemned the day. In 1815, after the War of 1812, President James Madison proclaimed a holiday in November in thanks for victories. The custom was celebrated mainly as a religious observance, locally and regionally by states, but on different dates.

Sara Josepha Hale, of Philadelph­ia, helped in the establishm­ent of Thanksgivi­ng as a formal national holiday. An author and editor, Hale penned “Mary Had a Little Lamb.” In her quest to establish the holiday, she wrote editorials and sent thousands of letters. Her efforts finally moved President Abraham Lincoln. In the midst of the Civil War, he declared November 26, 1863, as Thanksgivi­ng Day.

Other presidents followed Lincoln’s example. But, in 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the date from the fourth to the third Thursday of November to accommodat­e the wishes of business merchants, who were eager for more shopping time before Christmas. This caused so much opposition that in 1941, a Congressio­nal Joint Resolution again made Thanksgivi­ng the fourth Thursday of November.

HAPPY THANKSGIVI­NG!

Carole Christman Koch grew up in Berks County and has been published in numerous publicatio­ns. She has a passion for writing and has many stories from growing up on a farm to everyday stories.

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