Worldofceleb.com - Famous Quotes

Happy Thanksgiving from worldofceleb.com

          26th November, 2009

 

Home     Celebrity Gallery    Celebrity Ecards   Celebrity Birthdays    Jokes   Beauty    Quotations   Holidays

:: Happy Thanksgiving ::
Thanksgiving Day Home
Thanksgiving History
Thanksgiving Recipes
America's Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving Day Proclamation
Mayflower Myths
The Mayflower

Send Thanksgiving Greetings

Quotes Category
New Year
Generosity
Birthdays
Weekends
Life And Living
Time Management
Opportunity
Perception
Resolution
Temptation

Mayflower Myths

MYTH: The first Thanksgiving was in 1621 and the pilgrims celebrated it every year thereafter.

FACT: The first feast wasn't repeated, so it wasn't the beginning of a tradition. In fact, the colonists didn't even call the day Thanksgiving. To them, a thanksgiving was a religious holiday in which they would go to church and thank God for a specific event, such as the winning of a battle. On such a religious day, the types of recreational activities that the pilgrims and Wampanoag Indians participated in during the 1621 harvest feast--dancing, singing secular songs, playing games--wouldn't have been allowed. The feast was a secular celebration, so it never would have been considered a thanksgiving in the pilgrims minds.



MYTH: The original Thanksgiving feast took place on the fourth Thursday of November.

FACT: The original feast in 1621 occurred sometime between September 21 and November 11. Unlike our modern holiday, it was three days long. The event was based on English harvest festivals, which traditionally occurred around the 29th of September. President Franklin D. Roosevelt set the date for Thanksgiving to the fourth Thursday of November in 1939 (approved by Congress in 1941). Abraham Lincoln had previously designated it as the last Thursday in November, which may have correlated it with the November 21, 1621, anchoring of the Mayflower at Cape Cod.


MYTH: The pilgrims wore only black and white clothing. They had buckles on their hats, garments, and shoes.

FACT: Buckles did not come into fashion until later in the seventeenth century and black and white were commonly worn only on Sunday and formal occasions. Women typically dressed in red, earthy green, brown, blue, violet, and gray, while men wore clothing in white, beige, black, earthy green, and brown.


MYTH: The pilgrims brought furniture with them on the Mayflower.

FACT: The only furniture that the pilgrims brought on the Mayflower was chests and boxes. They constructed wooden furniture once they settled in Plymouth.


MYTH: The Mayflower was headed for Virginia, but due to a navigational mistake it ended up in Cape Cod Massachusetts.

FACT: The Pilgrims were in fact planning to settle in Virginia, but not the modern-day state of Virginia. They were part of the Virginia Company, which had the rights to most of the eastern seaboard of the U.S. The pilgrims had intended to go to the Hudson River region in New York State, which would have been considered "Northern Virginia," but they landed in Cape Cod instead. Treacherous seas prevented them from venturing further south.

Home  Celebrity Gallery   Celebrity Ecards   Celebrity Search   Beauty   Holidays   Movies   Quotations   Poems   Jokes   Videos   News   Ecards   Games   Today's Babe  Cartoons  Hot Babes  Add Url   Horoscope   Related Websites
 
Copyright  2003 - 2009 Worldofceleb All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer || Privacy Policy