Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Our Thanksgiving Origins



Happy Thanksgiving! This week our Pathfinder Produce market is closed so our staff may enjoy the holiday with their friends and loved ones, but we’ll be open next Thursday, December 5, to assist you with all your fresh produce needs for this busy time of year. We look forward to seeing you between noon and 5 p.m. at the Village Commons. Pathfinder Produce … we’re rooted in the community!

Pathfinder Village is getting into the seasonal spirit and we have a few events planned: On Saturday, December 7 at 2 p.m., our Pathfinder Village Hand Bell Choir will perform at the National Baseball Hall of Fame as part of their traditional holiday Deck the Hall event. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; details are here. Guests are encouraged to bring a new, unwrapped toy or five non-perishable food items for free admission and to help brighten the season for families in need.

On Sunday, December 8 at 3 p.m., our very dear friends from the Sidney Community Band will perform a concert of carols and musical favorites at the Pathfinder Village Gym; all are invited to enjoy this heartwarming concert. And to round out their holiday performances, the Bell Choir members will play at the First United Methodist Church in Oneonta on Saturday, December 14 at 2 p.m.

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On Thursday and through the weekend, many of us will gather with friends and family to celebrate Thanksgiving. While many will enjoy turkey with all the trimmings, it’s always best for your health to focus on small portions, check your carb and fat intake, eschew alcoholic drinks, and to eat a selection of healthy fruits and veggies. 

It’s also recommended to have some physical activity after the meal, whether it’s helping with the clean-up chores or taking a brisk walk to get some fresh air. (Other new traditions could include playing basketball or touch football, refilling the woodshed, playing tag or going to the playground with the little ones, or sledding and making snowmen if there’s snow).

History buff that I am, I also enjoy feeding my brain by reading non-fiction on Thanksgiving -- after the dishes are done, the fire is blazing, the dog is snoring, and quiet settles over the house. Recent research indicates a formal thanksgiving first may have occurred in the Continental U.S. as early as 1565 in St. Augustine, then under Spanish rule.

Most of us are familiar with the story of the Plymouth Colony’s Thanksgiving in 1621. Feasting on field- and forest-sourced delectable dishes, the Pilgrims, 90 Wampanoag warriors, and lone Patuxet surviving tribe member Squanto (Tisquantum) celebrated their harvest bounty for three days after the settlement’s starving time decimated their population earlier that year.

Other Thanksgiving celebrations were held locally through the early years of European settlements. The next celebration of note followed the Colonists’ victory at the Battle of Saratoga during the Revolution; the Continental Congress and General Washington proclaimed Thursday, December 18, 1777, as a day of national thanksgiving. The Continental Congress continued its annual thanksgiving proclamations through 1784.

Five years later, when the United States was a new, independent nation, President Washington declared the first national Thanksgiving  on November 26, 1789. The President attended church services and donated beer and food to imprisoned debtors in New York City, then the nation’s capital city. While I haven’t been able to find a clear source on the web, I recall an article from the New York State Historical Association’s Heritage Magazine from the early 1980s, which cited Washington’s choice of Thursday to celebrate on was to avoid overlapping with the regularly observed sabbaths for Muslims, Jews, and Christians.

From Washington’s administration onward, days of thanksgiving were declared intermittently by various presidents or state governors. The modern tradition of Thanksgiving began during the dark days of the Civil War  when Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November 1863 as a special day of gratitude for both military gains and seasonal harvests. Later, another great war-time president, FDR, changed the day to the fourth Thursday of the month. 

Until next time, be thankful and be well,

Lori