Is it true Thanksgiving was invented by the editor of Harper's Bazaar?
29-Nov-1985
Dear
Cecil:
A friend of mine says she heard from "a reputable source" that
Thanksgiving was actually invented by Harper's Bazaar in the 1800s.
Can this be true? --Mindy, Champaign, Illinois
Dear Mindy:
Right idea, wrong magazine.
Thanksgiving as we know it today--at least on the scale we know
it--is largely the creation of Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of
Godey's Lady's Book, one of the first women's magazines. Mrs.
Hale spent 36 years browbeating public officials high and low before
finally getting Thanksgiving declared a national holiday in 1863.
But first a little history. What we now think of as the original
Thanksgiving took place in the fall of 1621 at the Plymouth colony in
Massachusetts, with the Pilgrims and some 90 Wampanoag Indians on
hand to chow down, play volleyball, and exchange native diseases. (No
joke--an earlier tribe of Indians had been wiped out by
European-imported smallpox.) The occasion came to be a semiofficial
holiday among New Englanders, one of many such celebrations held
throughout the colonies at various times of the year.
The idea of holding a national Thanksgiving, however, was slow to
catch on. The Continental Congress scheduled the first one for
Thursday, December 18, 1777, to celebrate the defeat of General
Burgoyne at Saratoga. In 1789 George Washington proclaimed a
one-time-only day of thanksgiving for Thursday, November 26, to
celebrate the new Constitution.
But his successors let the idea drop. Thomas Jefferson, for one,
considered proclaiming holidays "a monarchical practice" and paid no
attention to Thanksgiving during his term of office.
Enter Mrs. Hale. A native of New Hampshire, she became obsessed with
the idea that "Thanksgiving like the Fourth of July should be
considered a national festival by all our people." Her opening
salvo was her first novel, Northwood, published in 1827. An
entire chapter was devoted to a detailed description of a
Thanksgiving dinner complete with stuffed turkey and pumpkin pie.
In 1846, nine years after she became the editor of Godey's Lady's
Book, she launched a crusade to make Thanksgiving an official
holiday. Every fall the magazine would editorialize on the
subject, meanwhile running high-cholesterol but probably pretty darn
tasty recipes for such things as "Indian Pudding with Frumenty sauce"
and "ham soaked in cider three weeks, stuffed with sweet potatoes,
and baked in maple syrup." Mrs. Hale also wrote hundreds of
letters to influential people urging them to support her cause.
Her efforts continued up through the Civil War. In 1861 she asked
both sides to "lay aside our enmities on this one day and join in a
Thanksgiving Day of Peace." The appeal failed, but eventually,
some believe, she was able to pitch President Lincoln in
person. Whatever the case, Abe finally issued a National
Thanksgiving Proclamation on October 3, 1863, setting aside the last
Thursday of November as the official day.
Thanksgiving continued to be proclaimed annually by the president
this way until 1939, when Franklin Roosevelt blithely declared that
Thanksgiving that year was going to take place on the third Thursday
of November. Crass commercialism was the chief
consideration--FDR hoped to woo retailers, who complained that they
needed more time to "make proper provision for the Christmas rush"
and incidentally cram in a few more shopping days.
FDR's move outraged Republicans and quite a few football coaches
throughout the country, who claimed that not only was FDR trampling
on sacred national traditions, he was screwing up the bowl game
schedule. For two years, people celebrated Thanksgiving on one
of two different days, depending on their political inclinations. In
1941, however, Congress got into the act by officially declaring that
Thanksgiving would thenceforward fall on the fourth Thursday of
November.
Two weeks later FDR declared World War II. And you thought NIXON was
a sore loser.
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_147.html