Thanksgiving is the quintessential American holiday…but not for
the reasons we generally remember. The Pilgrims and the Wampanoags did indeed
share a harvest celebration together at Plymouth in fall 1621, but that moment
got forgotten almost immediately, overwritten by the long history of the
settlers’ attacks on their Indigenous neighbors.
In 1841 a book that reprinted the early diaries and letters from
the Plymouth colony recovered the story of that three-day celebration in which
ninety Indigenous Americans and the English settlers shared fowl and deer.
This story of peace and goodwill among men who by the 1840s were
more often enemies than not inspired Sarah Josepha Hale, who edited the popular
women’s magazine Godey’s Lady’s Book, to think that a national
celebration could ease similar tensions building between the slave-holding
South and the free North. She lobbied for legislation to establish a day of
national thanksgiving.
And then, on April
12, 1861, southern soldiers fired on Fort Sumter, a
federal fort in Charleston Harbor, and the meaning of a holiday for giving
thanks changed.
Southern leaders wanted to destroy the United States of America
and create their own country, based not in the traditional American idea that
“all men are created equal,” but rather in its opposite: that some men were
better than others and had the right to enslave their neighbors. In the 1850s,
convinced that society worked best if a few wealthy men ran it, southern
leaders had bent the laws of the United States to their benefit, using it to
protect enslavement above all.
In 1860, northerners elected Abraham Lincoln to the presidency
to stop rich southern enslavers from taking over the government and using it to
cement their own wealth and power. As soon as he was elected, southern leaders
pulled their states out of the Union to set up their own country. After the
firing on Fort Sumter, Lincoln and the fledgling Republican Party set out to
end the slaveholders’ rebellion.
The early years of the war did not go well for the U.S. By the
end of 1862, the armies still held, but people on the home front were losing
faith. Leaders recognized the need both to acknowledge the suffering and to
keep Americans loyal to the cause. In November and December, seventeen state
governors declared state thanksgiving holidays.
New York governor Edwin Morgan’s widely reprinted proclamation
about the holiday reflected that the previous year “is numbered among the dark
periods of history, and its sorrowful records are gravened on many
hearthstones.” But this was nonetheless a time for giving thanks, he wrote,
because “the precious blood shed in the cause of our country will hallow and
strengthen our love and our reverence for it and its institutions…. Our
Government and institutions placed in jeopardy have brought us to a more just
appreciation of their value.”
The next year, Lincoln got ahead of the state proclamations. On July 15 he declared a national day of Thanksgiving,
and the relief in his proclamation was almost palpable. After two years of
disasters, the Union army was finally winning. Bloody, yes; battered, yes; but
winning. At Gettysburg in early July, Union troops had sent Confederates
reeling back southward. Then, on July
4, Vicksburg had finally fallen to U. S. Grant’s army. The
military tide was turning.
President Lincoln set Thursday, August 6, 1863, for the
national day of Thanksgiving.
On that day, ministers across the country listed the signal victories of the
U.S. Army and Navy in the past year and reassured their congregations that it
was only a matter of time until the United States government put down the
southern rebellion. Their predictions acknowledged the dead and reinforced the
idea that their sacrifice had not been in vain.
In October
1863, President Lincoln declared a second national day
of Thanksgiving.
In the past year, he declared, the nation had been blessed. In the midst of a
civil war of unequaled magnitude and severity, he wrote, Americans had
maintained their laws and their institutions and had kept foreign countries
from meddling with their nation. They had paid for the war as they went,
refusing to permit the destruction to cripple the economy.
Instead, as they funded the war, they had also advanced farming,
industry, mining, and shipping. Immigrants had poured into the country to
replace men lost on the battlefield, and the economy was booming. And Lincoln
had recently promised that the government would end slavery once and for all.
The country, he predicted, “with a large increase of freedom,” would survive,
stronger and more prosperous than ever.
The president invited Americans “in every part of the United
States, and also those who are at sea, and those who are sojourning in foreign
lands” to observe the last
Thursday of November as a day of Thanksgiving.
In 1863, November’s last Thursday fell on the
26th. On November
19, Lincoln delivered an address at the dedication of
a national cemetery at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. He reached back to the
Declaration of Independence for the principles on which he called for Americans
to rebuild the severed nation:
”Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on
this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the
proposition that all men are created equal.”
Lincoln urged the crowd to take up the torch those who fought at
Gettysburg had laid down. He called for them to “highly resolve that these dead
shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth
of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people,
shall not perish from the earth.”
The following year, Lincoln proclaimed another day of Thanksgiving, this time congratulating Americans that God had
favored them not only with immigration but also with the emancipation of
formerly enslaved people.
“Moreover,” Lincoln wrote, “He has been pleased to animate and
inspire our minds and hearts with fortitude, courage, and resolution sufficient
for the great trial of civil war into which we have been brought by our
adherence as a nation to the cause of freedom and humanity, and to afford to us
reasonable hopes of an ultimate and happy deliverance from all our dangers and
afflictions.”
In 1861, Americans went to war to keep a cabal from taking
control of the government and turning it into an oligarchy. The fight against
that rebellion seemed at first to be too much for the nation to survive. But
Americans rallied and threw their hearts into the cause on the battlefields
even as they continued to work on the home front for a government that defended
democracy and equality before the law.
And in 1865, at least, they won.
-Heather
Cox Richardson
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