The First "First Thanksgiving"
By Jay Sharp History News Service
Remember the month of November in kindergarten or first
grade? You learned that, during the fall of 1621, noble
Pilgrims invited friendly and helpful Indians to a feast to
celebrate a rich autumn harvest at a new colony called
Plymouth, in what is now Massachusetts. They ate stuffed
turkeys, baked ham, cranberry sauce and baked yams, then
finished the whole thing off with a big slice of pumpkin
pie.
That was our very first Thanksgiving. Right?
Wrong.
Virginia colonists had held a Thanksgiving two years
earlier in celebration of the safe arrival of new colonists.
So that must have been the first Thanksgiving, right?
Wrong again.
Some El Paso, Texas, citizens claim that the first
Thanksgiving occurred on the Rio Grande on April 30, 1598,
four centuries ago, a few miles downstream from their city's
modern location. It was celebrated by Don Juan de Onate's
expedition upon reaching the river en route to colonize
northern New Mexico for Spain.
The El Paso claim notwithstanding, Onate's Thanksgiving
was still not the first in America.
Florida residents point out that an earlier Spanish
Thanksgiving occurred near what is now St. Augustine, in
September, 1565. The event was celebrated by Don Pedro
Menendez's colonists, who had just landed. Menendez invited
the local Indians to the feast. The Spaniards and Indians
shared salt pork and sea biscuits.
Florida's school children are taught that the true first
Thanksgiving took place near Jacksonville in 1564, more than
half a century before the Pilgrim-Indian feast and 34 years
before Onate's celebration. The Jacksonville Thanksgiving,
it is thought, was celebrated by Huguenots -- French
Protestants -- who gave thanks for their new settlement.
Apparently, this was, indeed, the first European
Thanksgiving in the United States.
But it was still not our very first Thanksgiving. Credit
for that event belongs to the Native Americans.
Among others, the Indians who greeted the Pilgrims when
they stepped onto Plymouth Rock had long conducted
Thanksgiving festivals six times a year. The date for the
first Thanksgiving in America is lost somewhere in
pre-history.
In fact, from a worldwide perspective, the concept of
giving thanks appears to be universal and ancient, an
expression of gratitude to the gods who delivered game and
harvest to early hunters and foragers. We see evidence
embedded in the folk stories and ceremonies of people who
still depend on wild animals and plants for their living. We
see it in the figures carved from stone and images painted
or scribed on cave walls during antiquity.
I know of a thanks-giving scene, thousands of years old,
painted on the wall of a cave in a mountain in the desert of
West Texas. It shows a man dancing to celebrate his kill of
a mountain sheep, which has a spear driven through its body.
The man can now feed his family.
From contemporaneous records, we know that the Pilgrims
and Indian had turkey and other game birds as well as sea
foods, venison, Indian corn, beans, berries and nuts on
their menu in that fall of 1621. They drank mostly beer,
wine and whiskies -- all safer than the local water.
Contrary to popular notion, they did not have cranberry
sauce, pumpkin pie or even, unimaginably, football.
The idea of Thanksgiving persisted well beyond the
Pilgrims, probably a reflection of humanity's enduring need
to express gratitude for good fortune.
On June 20, 1676, colonists on the eastern seaboard
issued the "First Thanksgiving Proclamation," setting "apart
the 29th day of this instant June, as a day of Solemn
Thanksgiving..."
On October 3, 1789, George Washington issued the first
presidential Thanksgiving Proclamation, setting the "26th
day of November next" as a day for giving thanks to God for
"favorable interpositions of His providence in the course
and conclusion of the late (revolutionary) war."
Finally, on October 3, 1863, Thanksgiving became an
annual American holiday when Abraham Lincoln invited "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 as a day of Thanksgiving."
For 136 years, Thanksgiving has been a day commemorated
across America. It gives us a moment to recall the sweet
summer just past; to savor the last, fading colors of
autumn; to inhale the heady aromas of our new harvests; to
relish the coming together, once again, of family and good
friends; to cherish the blessings of life.
We can also be thankful that we patterned our
Thanksgiving after the feast enjoyed by the Plymouth
Pilgrims and Indians rather than the one experienced by the
St. Augustine Spaniards and Indians. Turkey tastes a lot
better than salt pork and sea biscuits.
Jay Sharp, an independent scholar and photographer based
in Las Cruces, N.M., specializing in southwestern history
and archaeology, is a writer for the History News Service.
[Jay W. Sharp, 2465 El Dorado Court, Las Cruces, NM
88011. Phone: (505) 521-2619; fax: (505) 521-0875; e-mail:
jsharp@totacc.com]
History News Service
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Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on November 18, 1998.
Pictured at top (left to right): Martin Luther,
Oliver Cromwell, Slave and author Olaudah Equiano, A wagon
train heads West, Mao Zedong, The Berlin Wall.
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