Every year, on the fourth Thursday in November, Americans gather around the table to celebrate Thanksgiving. It is a time of turkey, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, and love. But when did the holiday begin? And why do we capitalize “Thanksgiving”? Grab a plate, pull up a seat, and let’s dig into the history, and etymology, of Thanksgiving Day.
The story of Thanksgiving Day goes back to the first Pilgrims (or English settlers) in America. After landing at Plymouth, Massachusetts, they settled on land formerly inhabited by the Patuxet Indians.
In 1621, these settlers had their first successful harvest from the land. As such, they gathered to give praise and thanksgiving to God, along with 90 Native American Indians, who had helped the settlers survive their first winter.
This scene is commonly referenced when Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. However, the peace between the Pilgrims and the Native Americans did not last. And while some Native American tribes later formed alliances with settlers, many fought with the English, who subjected them to tremendous bloodshed and often drove tribes from their ancestral lands.
In truth, the Thanksgiving Americans celebrate today is more closely linked to something President Abraham Lincoln declared in 1861. On November 28, he ordered all governmental departments to close as a day of thanksgiving for “general blessings.” This aligns with what most Americans do with their loved ones on Thanksgiving Day: we give thanks for all our blessings, including one another. And we eat a lot, which does mean modern Thanksgiving shares something with the harvest festivals of the past!
But what about the word “thanksgiving”? Where does it come from? And when was it first applied to the holiday? Let’s take a look.
Whenever the word “Thanksgiving” comes to mind, we almost always associate it with the national holiday, which is a proper noun. This is also why we typically capitalize the term Thanksgiving Day.
However, the term itself is an old-fashioned common noun that doesn’t require capitalization. Typically, it was used in religious contexts:
We offer a prayer in thanksgiving for this bountiful harvest.
The origins of the term are simple enough: “thanksgiving” is a compound noun made up of the words “thanks” and “giving.” But what might be surprising is that the word was first used in the 1530s, more than a hundred years before the Pilgrim’s first “thanksgiving.” By contrast, the first recorded uses of Thanksgiving Day as a proper noun come from the 1670s.
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Like many holidays, Thanksgiving has inspired a lot of literature. To finish this post, then, let’s look at a Thanksgiving Day poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox:
Thanksgiving
We walk on starry fields of white And do not see the daisies; For blessings common in our sight We rarely offer praises. We sigh for some supreme delight To crown our lives with splendor, And quite ignore our daily store Of pleasures sweet and tender.
Our cares are bold and push their way Upon our thought and feeling. They hand about us all the day, Our time from pleasure stealing. So unobtrusive many a joy We pass by and forget it, But worry strives to own our lives, And conquers if we let it.
There’s not a day in all the year But holds some hidden pleasure, And looking back, joys oft appear To brim the past’s wide measure. But blessings are like friends, I hold, Who love and labor near us. We ought to raise our notes of praise While living hearts can hear us.
Full many a blessing wears the guise Of worry or of trouble; Far-seeing is the soul, and wise, Who knows the mask is double. But he who has the faith and strength To thank his God for sorrow Has found a joy without alloy To gladden every morrow.
We ought to make the moments notes Of happy, glad Thanksgiving; The hours and days a silent phrase Of music we are living. And so the theme should swell and grow As weeks and months pass o’er us, And rise sublime at this good time, A grand Thanksgiving chorus.
So as you gather around the table with your loved ones, we hope you have plenty of reasons to give thanks and you take that gratitude with you for the rest of the year. And if you have written any Thanksgiving poetry of your own, feel free to submit it for proofreading.
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