First Thanksgiving History Thanksgiving Before Plymouth Rock
First Thanksgiving History, Thanksgiving Before Plymouth Rock
Facts: If you learned in school that Thanksgiving started with the Pilgrims and the Indians feasting together in , your education might have been over-simplified.
Mike Stone/Alamy Did Thanksgiving start with Pilgrims? It's true that such a feast took place — and it was a doozy of a dinner. "For three dayes we entertained and feasted," wrote one colonist who experienced the 1621 event firsthand. They even ate , according to another, who recalled a "great store of wild Turkies."
But this type of event wasn't what the Puritans would have called "thanksgiving." To them, the word meant prayer. Many early American communities observed solemn, prayer-filled days of thanksgiving during the 17th century.
An earlier colonial one happened on Dec. 4, 1619, a year before the Pilgrims would arrive at Plymouth Rock, when colonists landed on what's now the coast of Virginia to found Berkeley Hundred (now Charles City). They were under strict orders from the London Company about what to do when they got there: "We ordaine that the day of our ships arrival … shall be yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God," read the edict. The Pilgrims might have feasted, but these colonists used the word "thanksgiving" first.
Did Thanksgiving Start With Pilgrims
Why Virginia Texas and Florida take issue with the Massachusetts claim to the first celebration
Myth: The first Thanksgiving took place in Plymouth, Mass.Facts: If you learned in school that Thanksgiving started with the Pilgrims and the Indians feasting together in , your education might have been over-simplified.
Mike Stone/Alamy Did Thanksgiving start with Pilgrims? It's true that such a feast took place — and it was a doozy of a dinner. "For three dayes we entertained and feasted," wrote one colonist who experienced the 1621 event firsthand. They even ate , according to another, who recalled a "great store of wild Turkies."
But this type of event wasn't what the Puritans would have called "thanksgiving." To them, the word meant prayer. Many early American communities observed solemn, prayer-filled days of thanksgiving during the 17th century.
An earlier colonial one happened on Dec. 4, 1619, a year before the Pilgrims would arrive at Plymouth Rock, when colonists landed on what's now the coast of Virginia to found Berkeley Hundred (now Charles City). They were under strict orders from the London Company about what to do when they got there: "We ordaine that the day of our ships arrival … shall be yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God," read the edict. The Pilgrims might have feasted, but these colonists used the word "thanksgiving" first.