Our Point of View
Thanksgiving
By Tom Purcell
“What do you mean America's Thanksgiving
holiday is based on a myth! You must have hit the
brandy a little early this year."
“The Christian Science Monitor published a
detailed report on it. They found that the holiday
has two distinct histories – one real, the other
made up. We celebrate the made-up version."
"Made up!"
"Yep. Everything historians know about the
first Thanksgiving is based on the accounts of two
colonists: Governor William Bradford and a fellow
named Edward Winslow."
"Go on."
"In 1621, Winslow wrote a letter to a friend. He said
that after a plentiful harvest, the 52 remaining colonists decided to
feast. The governor sent out four men to hunt for fowl. Ninety
Native Americans, the Wampanoags, also joined in; they contributed
five deer. The colonists and Wampanoags feasted for three days."
"They ate deer meat on Thanksgiving?"
"In 1641, Governor Bradford wrote a book about the history of
the Plymouth settlement. In it, he also described the first
Thanksgiving. But the British stole his book during the
Revolutionary War. It didn't turn up until the late1800's – after
America's Thanksgiving tradition was already formed."
"The lousy Brits. So what do we know about the first
Thanksgiving?"
"Well, it was nothing like it has been presented. For starters, the
pilgrims didn't eat turkey. The 'fowl' Winslow described in his letter
were probably geese or duck."
"Thanksgiving duck?"
"Yeah, and there was no cranberry sauce. The colonists didn't
begin boiling berries with sugar until 1671."
"What are you going to tell me next? That there weren't any
mashed potatoes or stuffing or pies for dessert!"
"Funny you mention that. White and sweet potatoes weren't yet
available to the colonists. There wasn't bread yet, either – they had
no ovens. And though pumpkins were available, it's doubtful they
had the butter and wheat flour they needed to make pie crust."
"Oh, brother. Then what did they eat?"
"They ate what was available then. In addition to the fowl, their
meal probably included grapes, plums, flint corn and sea food – you
know, lobster, crab and mussels."
"Lobster, crab and mussels! Who the heck
catered the first Thanksgiving, Long John
Silvers! If what you say is true, why does our
Thanksgiving celebration differ so much from
the first one?"
"The reason dates back to the 19th century.
Back then there was no official Thanksgiving
holiday and if people celebrated it, they did so
in a private and solemn manner. A woman
named Sarah Josepha Hale changed that."
"Who was she?"
"Hale was editor of a popular lady's magazine.
She wrote editorials promoting an official Thanksgiving
holiday. In 1858, she petitioned the president to declare it
a national holiday. In 1863, Abraham Lincoln did just that."
"But how did we get our facts so wrong about the first
Thanksgiving?"
"Well, Hale also published numerous recipes for turkey, stuffing,
cranberry sauce pumpkin pie, etc. She idealized the first
Thanksgiving and the foods and traditions she promoted are the
very same ones we now associate with our Thanksgiving feast."
"And most of what we do on Thanksgiving – and much of what
we eat – has nothing to do with what really happened during the first
Thanksgiving, when the colonists supposedly 'broke bread' with the
Native Americans?"
"Yes, that is correct. The relationship between Native Americans
and the colonists was complex and not always pleasant. In fact, in
the coming decades after more colonists arrived and pushed the
Native Americans westward, the two factions would soon find
themselves in a bloody war."
"Boy, you sure know how to cheer a fellow up for the holidays."
"But we should be cheerful. Regardless of how our Thanksgiving
tradition was formed – regardless of what is fact and what is myth
-- we have an incredible abundance of blessings to cherish. We are
prosperous beyond measure, and we enjoy the greatest freedoms on
earth, despite politicians who ignore their constituents whenever
convenient and bow to deep-pocket pressures without a blink.
“And on this day, more than ever, we should say thanks to the
ranks of young men and women in uniform who serve at home and
abroad to help secure our freedoms. Their sacrifice secures our freedom.
Now that's something to be thankful for."
"Yes it is. Happy Thanksgiving!”
Already, several Florida municipalities, after witnessing the destruction of their wetlands, have banned the use of cypress mulches. In Louisiana, Gov. Kathleen Blanco is exploring her authority to carry out a broader moratorium. Consumers need to remember that their mulch purchases may be leaving New Orleans and other coastal communities vulnerable. Every bag of cypress mulch for you could mean another sandbag for someone else.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE: We don’t know about his science or his facts, but killing magnificent, mature cypress trees, or any living trees for that matter, just to grind up for mulch, doesn’t make any sense. MJ |