William
Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation
Wrote:
"Our harvest being
gotten in, our governor sent four
men on fowling, that so we might
after a special manner rejoice together
after we had gathered the fruits
of our labor. They four in one day
killed as much fowl as, with a little
help beside, served the company
almost a week. At which time, amongst
other recreations, we exercised
our arms, many of the Indians coming
amongst us, and among the rest their
greatest king Massasoit, with some
ninety men, whom for three days
we entertained and feasted, and
they went out and killed five deer,
which we brought to the plantation
and bestowed on our governor, and
upon the captain and others.

And
although it be not always so plentiful
as it was at this time with us,
yet by the goodness of God, we are
so far from want that we often wish
you partakers of our plenty." "They
began now to gather in the small
harvest they had, and to fit up
their house and dwelling against
winter, being all well recovered
in health and strength and had all
things in good plenty. For as some
were thus employed in affairs abroad,
others were exercised in fishing,
about cod and bass and other fish,
of which they took good store, of
which every family had their portion.
All the summer there was no want;
and now began to come in store of
fowl, as winter approached, of which
this place did abound when they
came first (but afterward decreased
by degrees). And besides waterfowl
there was great store of wild turkeys,
of which they took many, besides
venison, etc. Besides, they had
about a peck of meal a week to a
person, or now since harvest, Indian
corn to that proportion. Which made
many afterwards write so largely
of their plenty here to their friends
in England, which were not feigned
by true reports."

The story of the
first Thanksgiving is about the
Pilgrim's feast of thanks and festivity
at Plymouth, Massachusetts.
The Pilgrims set
sail from Plymouth, England on the
Mayflower on September 6, 1620,
They were fortune hunters, bound
for the New World. Men, women, and
children were crowded into the ship
along with the sailors on board.
The passengers for the most part
were the 'separatists', who called
themselves the "Saints", and others,
whom the separatists called the
"Strangers."

They sighted land
in November after 66 days of an
arduous voyage. The men held a meeting
onboard and an agreement of truce
between the two groups was worked
out. It was called the Mayflower
Compact.
The agreement guaranteed equality
among them.
They joined together
to be known as, and called, the
"Pilgrims." They elected John Carver
as their first governor. They continued
their
jouney 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
had already settled there for over
five years. And it was there that
the Pilgrims finally decided to
settle.

Plymouth offered
a convenient harbour and a multitude
of natural resources. Another good
fortune for the Pilgrims was that
the Indians in the area were not
hostile to them. But as many new
adventurous enterprises are, their
peaceful lives were interrupted.
They had not the resources to fare
through the winter in this strange
place. They became sick and weakened.
But God was with
them and they were helped by some
of the local Indians. They were
offered aid in the form of food
and assistance in cultivating food
that would grow easily there. They
further showed the Pilgrims how
to store their harvest of vegetables
and corn so they would have plenty
to eat when the hard winter weather
came.

Having made it
through that first winter, they
were grateful and felt the need
to give thanks and rejoice in their
victory over their hardships. So
they invited the Indians to join
them in a feast. They prepared things
like wild turkey, pumpkin pies,
barley breads, corn breads, peas,
and fish. The third year brought
them devastation as the corn crops
failed.
The then Governor,
William Bradford called a day of
prayer. Soon after it rained, and
they joyfully planned a feast day
for the harvest, similar to the
one they had celebrated on that
first harvest time. At the time
of this feast day, November 29,
the day itself was proclaimed to
be a day of Thanksgiving.
We now celebrate the day of Thanksgiving
on the fourth Thursday of November.

SOME
THANKSGIVING NUMBER TRIVIA
1620
- The year the Pilgrims came to
what is now the United States aboard
a small cargo ship, the Mayflower.
102
- The number of passengers known
to have been on the Mayflower
32
- The number of children and other
young people among the passengers
2
- The number of passengers who died
on the voyage across the Atlantic
0
- The number of passenger cabins
- In those days, merchant ships
were not set up for the comfort
of passengers. They would have slept
in hammocks or paid the ship's carpenter
to build cabins or bunks for them

65
- The number of days it took for
the Mayflower to sail from England
to America
41
- The number of men who signed the
Mayflower Compact
50
- Approximate number of Pilgrims
who died of the "great sickness"
and harsh conditions during the
first winter in the new land
1621
- The year Samoset, an Abnaki Indian
from Maine, walked into the Pilgrim's
village shouting, "Welcome
Englishmen!" He had learned
broken Englidh from previous contact
with fishermen and traders. Through
Samoset, the Pilgrims met Squanto,
who taught them to use fish as fertilizer
when planting corn, pumpkins and
beans, established friendly relations
with the local Wampanoag tribe.
The Wampanoag had organized government
and religion and were able farmers,
fishermen, hunters and gatherers,
sot he tribe had ample and varied
food.

3
- The number of days the first feast
of Thanksgiving lasted in October
1621. Wampanoags and colonists shared
venison, duck, turkey, clams, shellfish,
corn pudding, pumpkin, dried berries
and other local edibles.
9
- The number of women and teenage
girls who prepared that three day
feast for 140 hungry people.
35
million - The number of Americans
today who are direct descendants
of the first Mayflower Pilgrims.
That's 12 % of our population.
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