While President Bush (news
- web
sites) on Thursday said Thanksgiving is a day when Americans
are grateful for their families and friends, the many gifts
of America and freedom.
The president issued his annual Thanksgiving
Proclamation this year from Texas, where he's spending the holiday
with family at his ranch. They shared a turkey dinner Wednesday
with the visiting king and queen of Spain.
In his message to the nation,
Bush noted that George Washington proclaimed the first National
Day of Thanksgiving in 1789. Since then, he said, in times
of war and in times of peace, Americans
have gathered with family and friends to give thanks
to God for their blessings.
And he said the true strength
of America lies in the hearts and souls of its citizens as
they help make the nation and the world a better place.
The Pilgrims, who celebrated
the first thanksgiving in America, were fleeing religious
persecution in their native England. In 1609 a group of Pilgrims
left England for the religious freedom in Holland where they
lived and prospered. After a few years their children were
speaking Dutch and had become attached to the dutch way of
life. This worried the Pilgrims.
They considered the Dutch frivolous and their ideas a threat
to their children's education and morality. This
same thing we see today with our children can be seen by the
fall of morals due to television, MTV, and the wrong role
models setting a false standard..
On Sept. 6, 1620 the Pilgrims set sail for the New World
on a ship called the Mayflower. They sailed from Plymouth,
England and aboard were 44 Pilgrims, who called themselves
the "Saints", and 66 others ,whom the Pilgrims called
the "Strangers."
Although they had first sighted land off Cape Cod they did
not settle until they arrived at Plymouth, which had been
named by Captain John Smith in 1614. It was there that the
Pilgrims decide to settle. Plymouth offered an excellent harbor.
A large brook offered a resource for fish. The Pilgrims biggest
concern was attack by the local Native American Indians. But
the Patuxets were a peaceful group and did not prove to be
a threat.
The first winter was devastating to the Pilgrims. The cold,
snow and sleet was exceptionally heavy, interfering with the
workers as they tried to construct their settlement. March
brought warmer weather and the health of the Pilgrims improved,
but many had died during the long winter. Of the 110 Pilgrims
and crew who left England, less that 50 survived the first
winter.
On March 16, 1621 , what was to become
an important event took place, an Indian
brave walked into the Plymouth settlement.
The Pilgrims were frightened until the Indian called out "Welcome"
(in English!).
His name was Samoset and he was an
Abnaki Indian. He had learned English from the captains
of fishing boats that had sailed off the coast. After staying
the night Samoset left the next day. He soon returned with
another Indian named Squanto who spoke better English than
Samoset. Squanto told the Pilgrims of his voyages across the
ocean and his visits to England and Spain. It was in England
where he had learned English.
Squanto's importance to
the Pilgrims was enormous and it can be said that they would
not have survived without his help. It
was Squanto who taught the Pilgrims how to tap the maple trees
for sap. He taught them which plants were poisonous and which
had medicinal powers. He taught them how to plant the Indian
corn by heaping the earth into low mounds with several seeds
and fish in each mound. The decaying fish fertilized the corn.
He also taught them to plant other crops with the corn.
The Pilgrims had much to celebrate, they had built homes
in the wilderness, they had raised enough crops to keep them
alive during the long coming winter, they were at peace with
their Indian neighbors.
The Pilgrim Governor William Bradford proclaimed a day of
thanksgiving to be shared by all the colonists
and the neighboring Native Americans. They
invited Squanto and the other Indians to join them in their
celebration. Their chief, Massasoit, and 90 braves came to
the celebration which lasted for 3 days. They
played games, ran races, marched and played drums. The Indians
demonstrated their skills with the bow and arrow and the Pilgrims
demonstrated their musket skills
The 3rd year brought a spring and summer that was hot and
dry with the crops dying in the fields. Governor
Bradford ordered a day of fasting and prayer, and it was soon
thereafter that the rain came. To celebrate - November
29th of that year was proclaimed a day of thanksgiving. This
date is believed to be the real true beginning of the present
day Thanksgiving Day
In 1817 New York State had adopted Thanksgiving Day as an
annual custom. By the middle of the 19th century many other
states also celebrated a Thanksgiving Day. In
1863 President Abraham Lincoln appointed a national day of
thanksgiving. Since then each president has issued a Thanksgiving
Day proclamation, usually designating the fourth Thursday
of each November as the holiday..
Have a wonderful and safe holiday.
Indian Crusader News
Staff.
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