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Susie
11-23-2006, 05:52 AM
Hi

Happy thanks giving to all, and now for the history lesson



'Thanksgiving' is based upon the story of the Pilgrims and their thankful community feast at Plymouth, Massachusetts.

The Pilgrims who set sail from Plymouth (England) on a ship called the Mayflower, on September 6, 1620 were, in fact, fortune hunters bound for the resourceful 'New World'. The Mayflower was a small ship crowded with men, women and children and also, of course, the sailors working on the ship. Aboard were passengers comprising the 'Separatists', who called themselves the "Saints", and others .... whom the 'Separatists' called the "Strangers".

After land was sighted in November, following 66 days of a lethal voyage, a meeting was held and an agreement of truce was worked out. It was called the 'Mayflower Compact' and the agreement guaranteed equality amongst the members of the two groups. They merged together to be recognized as the "Pilgrims" and elected John Carver as their first Governor.






Although the Pilgrims first sighted land off Cape Cod, Massachusetts, they did not actually settle until they arrived at a place called Plymouth. It was Captain John Smith who named the place after the English port-city in 1614 and who had been settled there for over five years. Thus, it was here that the Pilgrims finally decided to settle as Plymouth offered an excellent harbour and plenty of resources. An added bonus was that the local Indians were also non-hostile.

However, their happiness was very short-lived because they were ill-equipped to face the winter on this estranged place and were ravaged thoroughly!


As luck would have it they were somehow saved by a group of local native Americans who befriended them and helped them with food. Soon the natives had taught the settlers the technique to enable the cultivation of corn and how to grow and store (for hard days) the native vegetables. By the next winter they had raised enough crops to keep them alive. The winter came and passed by without much harm. The settlers knew they had beaten the odds and it was time to celebrate.





They celebrated it with a grand community feast wherein the friendly native Americans were also invited. It was very similar to the Harvest Feast, the Pilgrims used to have in England. The new recipes entailed "corn" (wheat as the Pilgrims called it), Indian corn, barley, pumpkins and peas, "fowl" .... especially
"waterfowl" ..... deer, fish and yes of course, the wild "Turkey".





However, the third year was real bad when the corn got damaged and Pilgrim Governor William Bradford ordered a day of fasting and prayer and very soon ..... the rains followed! To celebrate, on November 29th of that year, it was proclaimed a day of 'Thanksgiving'. This date is believed to be the real beginning of the present 'Thanksgiving Day'.

Today 'Thanksgiving Day' is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of every November ...... this date was set by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1939 and approved by Congress in 1941. Earlier it was the last Thursday in November as was designated by the former President Abraham Lincoln. However, sometimes the last Thursday would turn out to be the fifth Thursday of the month and that falls too close to Christmas! That left businesses even less than a month between to cope with these two big festivals and hence the change.

Emmalee25
11-23-2006, 02:00 PM
So lets celebrate the fact that we colonised the US of A.....
Im sure our forefathers would be turning in their graves if they knew how hard it was for us to settle now, the 'savages' welcomed and helped the pilgrims back then, yet the immigration system cant do the same in the 21st century.....
defo food for thought me thinks!!!! ;)

Happy thanksgiving everyone, eat drink and be very merry!

Emma x

reecey
11-23-2006, 03:55 PM
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone
from all of us

Bobby
11-23-2006, 04:10 PM
I like the REAL meaning of Thanksgiving ....contrary to the above.

It's when you arrive in the States for the first time with your rose tinted spectacles on and you take a look around and think that it might a good idea to give up all sense of reasoning and actually set about living here permanently.

"THANKS for GIVING me that stupid ******* idea!"

That's where it began all those years ago.
Hence, Thanksgiving as we know it now!

Have a great day y'all!

Bobby

chris
11-23-2006, 04:25 PM
Were we to apply Thanksgiving to the current age, then we would be celebrating it in March or April, as it would have taken 32 weeks for the permission by London to make the voyage using the 'E'xpedition 2 visa. Would the Pilgrim Fathers been kicked on marginality one wonders? They certainly wouldn't have qualified under substantial investment! Plymouth Rock would have been manned with a USCIS guy wearing feathers and who knows, if they were only given 3 months entry on the Waiver then, they may not have even been here long enough to have suffered the first bad winter and wouold have had to have gone back. There would have been no USA. One can only assume that not having the proper visa or possibly exceeding their 90 days, they USA was grown by a bunch of illegals! Were the Indians have helped them now, they would be commiting a felony as they would be helping illegals? Have you also noticed that Jon Carver has the same initials as John Caulfield at the embassy. As for John Smith, these b****y Smiths get everywhere! So we have made progress since 1614??
Humor over, now enjoy a vacation day, some nice food, enjoy the family time. The latter is for me the real Thanksgiving.