[rollei_list] Re: A Rambling Discourse on Thanksgiving

  • From: "Robert Meier" <robertmeier@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2006 13:40:25 -0600

Marc -- Thanksgiving is often the final Thursday in November, but not always. Not this year. It's the 4th Thursday in November. Robert


----- Original Message ----- From: "Marc James Small" <marcsmall@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; <rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 1:07 PM
Subject: [rollei_list] A Rambling Discourse on Thanksgiving


The final Thursday in November is celebrated in
the United States and its possessions as
Thanksgiving Day.  This is a rather conflicted
holiday, being at the same time a day of
remembrance and thanks, a day of gluttony, and a
day of commercial anticipation of the forthcoming
Christmas Season.  Most US families will eat a
large meal, generally centered around a roast
turkey, with stuffing, mashed potatoes, pumpkin
pie, and the like;  in the course of the meal,
many of these families pause to go around the
table with each person reciting the things for
which they are most thankful.  Yet, at the same
time, large US daily newspapers publish their
largest issue on Thanksgiving Day, due to the
number of advertisements included, and one of the
landmark events is the Macy's Parade in New York
City.  The Friday after Thanksgiving is a day of
massive sales with many retail stores opening at
5 AM or even earlier, a day known to store
personnel as "Black Friday" due to the long hours
and intense pressures.  (The large US retail
stores do about 25% of their ANNUAL sales during
Thanksgiving week.  This is a time to stay home
and avoid shopping malls!)  And the afternoon and
evening are devoted to college and professional
football games (US football, mind you) which will
see roughly 70% of the American populace watching
to some degree.  (Not me, however:  baseball
players are all at home today and shan't
resurface on a national scale until Spring Training starts in February.)

The history of Thanksgiving is interesting.  The
pre-Christian folks in Europe lived a pastoral
lifestyle:  that is, their lives were centered on
the raising and consumption of sheep and
cattle.  Thus, they developed a cycle of annual
events centered on the "Cross-Quarter Days", the
days halfway between Solstice and Equinox and
Equinox and Solistice, as these dates worked
well  to mark the birthing and harvesting cycle
of sheep.  Candlemass or Walpurgisnacht on 2nd
February, May Day or Beltane on 1st May,
Lammastide on 2nd August, and All Saints' Day on
1st November -- until the Revolution, the
Russians continued to regard these dates as the
starting dates for the seasons, with winter, for
instance, running from 1st November to 2nd
February, an interesting survival of practices
long predating the advent of SS Cyril and Basil
into the Slavic realms.  The later advent of
Christianity caused these Cross-Quarter Days to
become viewed as imbued with occult and pagan
overtones as we still can see in the US
celebration of the Eve of All Saints' Day,
otherwise known as All Hallows' Eve or, of course, Halloween.

Agriculture -- the raising of crops -- spread
north into Europe from the Mediterranean Basin
shortly before the rise of the Roman
Empire.  This brought with it a calendar based
upon the Equinox and Solstice cycles, yielding
Easter (Spring Equinox), Midsummer's Day (Summer
Solstice), Harvest Home (Fall Equinox), and
Christmas (Winter Solstice).  This cycle was
adopted by the Christian Church (and also by its
main rival, the cult of Mithra) early-on, and
even patently pagan festivals such as the Feast
of the Returning Sun, or the Yule, was turned
into the very Christian Christmas.

Harvest Home was the least of these
festivals.  It was a feast of thanksgiving for
the bringing in of the harvest;  along with
Midsummer's Day, it was a major feast during the
High Middle Ages and into the Renaissance but
faded substantially in the 1700's.  But it was
still on the Church Calendar and was actively
celebrated when the early colonies in what would
become the United States were founded.

The first formal mention of a day of thanksgiving
was in the charge given to the settlers of what
is today the Berkeley Plantation along the James
River in Virginia:  the commercial entity which
sent them out, the Bermuda Hundred Company,
instructed the settlers to hold an annual
celebration of thanksgiving on the anniversary of
their taking possession of the settlement.  The
landing was made in early December, 1619, but,
despite claims to the contrary, there is no
evidence that any celebration of thanksgiving was
held in December, 1620, or at any time thereafter
until the existence of the instructions was
discovered in the late 1800's.  The local tourism
wonks then began holding annual thanksgiving
celebrations at Berkeley which continue to this
day.  So, we have an early charge ignored for
more than two and a half centuries.

The Pilgrims at Plymouth Colony in what is now
Massachusetts (then still part of Virginia) did
hold a feast of thanksgiving a year after their
landing in 1621, but the feast was not held until
1623 and was irregularly repeated for the next
century.  It was then neglected until a revival
of interest in early New England lore in the
1800's caused it to be resurrected as a local
event.  During the US Civil War, President
Lincoln proclaimed an annual day of thanks, and
this soon became identified with the renovated
Pilgrim celebration.  By the late 1800's, most of
the US celebrated Thanksgiving on the last
Thursday in November;  by the end of that
century, this feast had come to be associated with turkey and the trimmings.

Bear in mind that the US enjoys a later growing
season than does most of Europe, so the
translation of the Feast of Harvest Home in late
September in Europe to the Feast of Thanksgiving
in late November does make some sense.  Many US
churches with European roots have revived a sort
of Harvest Home celebration in late September but
this generally involves the blessing of animals or fields or the like.

By the 1920's, it had become the norm that the
Christmas sales season would not begin until
after Thanksgiving -- even today, the Salvation
Army gets in trouble with the public when they
send out their fund-raising, bell-ringing Santas
before Thanksgiving.  President Franklin D
Roosevelt, to encourage an  uplift in the retail
trade, proclaimed the third Thursday in November
as Thanksgiving -- despite FDR's strong efforts
to get the US out of the Depression through
government intervention at all levels, the
Depression had returned with a vengeance in 1938,
and it was hoped that a week's increase in the
Christmas sales period would help.  This effort
was greeted with general hoots of derision by the
American people, and the entertainment industry
pilloried it mercilessly with frequent cracks on
the Jack Benny Show and the famous "dancing
turkey" in the movie HOLIDAY INN, whence comes
that ultimate song of the Yuletide, "I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas".

The US military makes a huge production of
Thanksgiving and always tries to ensure that
everyone gets a full turkey meal.  In 1975, I was
an unmarried Second Lieutenant in the Army.  The
guy scheduled for Staff Duty Officer on
Thanksgiving was an acquaintance whose wife had
just had a baby.  On a whim, I volunteered to
take the duty for him, and it ended up being a
great experience, not least as the Duty Officer
has to sample the food in the Mess Halls, so I
ended up with about three full meals.  On another
occasion, I happened to be in Washington, DC, on
Thanksgiving Day and on a whim went to the Air
and Space Museum, where I enjoyed a decent meal in their restaurant.

So, in the end, we celebrate Thanksgiving on the
last Thursday in November and most of us
celebrate in mixtures of thankfulness, gluttony,
and gloating anticipation of Christmas.  My wife
readied the turkey a while back with some minor
assistance from me (lift up this beast and get it
into the oven, cwaeth she!) and it will be ready
in an hour or so.  She is baking bread at the
moment.  The wine is chilling.  And, for us, it
will be a day of thanks and gluttony, as neither
of us are ardent in-person shoppers.  (We
probably will do a grocery run to the Commissary
at Fort Lee on Saturday, but we will avoid the malls at all costs!)

Enjoy, guys.  And for our non-USian members,
think of us in several hours, sitting around and
groaning from the pains of excess!

We all have so very, very much for which to be
thankful, and this List is not the least of the joys I experience every year.

Marc


msmall@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Cha robh bàs fir gun ghràs fir!

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