Some Facts About Thanksgiving

The holiday of Thanksgiving has its origins in European, particularly English harvest festivals. In the United States we credit the Pilgrims of Plymouth Massachusetts for the first Thanksgiving as they brought their traditions of fasting days and thanksgiving days with them. At that time, Thanksgiving was a series of events and religious services. As President, George Washington proclaimed a day of Thanksgiving. The states were free to celebrate thanksgiving on whatever day they chose. It wasn’t until 1863 when President Abraham Lincoln set the date as the last Thursday in November that there was a unified holiday.
Today we celebrate Thanksgiving on
the fourth Thursday of November because retailers convinced President Franklin
Roosevelt to move the holiday in 1939. The country
was still in a depression and retail sales needed a boost by having more
shopping days until Christmas. Roosevelt’s plan, known derisively as Franksgiving,
was met with political opposition. The fourth Thursday didn’t become the
official holiday until a Congressional Resolution in 1941.
There are a few mentions of
Thanksgiving in the early Quincy newspapers. Sometimes poems were published mentioning
harvest foods, commentaries about farmers getting the turkey, and stories of
turkeys being cared for by families, usually reprinted from eastern newspapers.
One story republished from Birmingham, Connecticut in the Quincy Whig in
December 1856, told about a woman with a long life and a large family saying, “We
doubt if there is another case in this country where a venerable mother can
call 230 of her lineal pedigree around her thanksgiving dinner table.”
Because there was no unified date
in the 19th century, states were joining together and proclaiming a
national thanksgiving on the same Thursday in November. The December 3, 1850
Quincy Whig wrote in an article titled Unique to the Last, “South Carolina will
observe Sunday, Oct. 24th as its day of Thanksgiving. What on earth
can a State be thankful for that is not thankful for the blessing of the
Union?”
Even though governors of various states were making proclamations about a day of “thanksgiving and prayer,” few businesses were closed and churches were not open as the day was a Thursday. In one letter to the Quincy Daily Whig in 1859 an anonymous writer named “One of Many,” wrote that as a New Englander he was used to a proper Thanksgiving with businesses closed and churches open but was dismayed that was not the case in Quincy. He complained that only one church was open for a “union service” and that the clergy were indolent. A rebuttal was published that same day and said, “… you have seen fit to publish an exceedingly bitter and cowardly attach upon the motives and character of Protestant clergymen of this city.” At about the same time, the Bank of Quincy announced it would not be open on Thanksgiving.
With Lincoln’s proclamation of
October 3, 1863 establishing Thanksgiving he was giving thanks that, “…peace
has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, the laws have
been respected and obeyed and that harmony has prevailed everywhere except in
the great theater of military conflict, while that theater has been greatly
contracted by the advancing armies and navies of the Union.” He goes on to
write, “I do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part of the United
States …. To observe and set apart the last Thursday in November next as a day
of thanksgiving and prayer….”
Dispatches sent to the Quincy newspapers during December 1864, would mention Thanksgiving Day feasts for the various armies, one saying, “Our soldiers having been fed on turkey on Thanksgiving Day, it is supposed will now be better able to ‘gobble’ up the enemy.” While another dispatch said, “Our soldiers we fed on turkeys, mince pies and all Thanksgiving luxuries, sent to them at private expense, at a greater cost than Great Britain would pay for the whole rations of her standing army in several months.”
After the war, in the later part of
the nineteenth century, Thanksgiving gained importance as a holiday. Each year the President and the Governor
would issue proclamations. Governor John M. Palmer’s proclamation in 1872 said
in part, “ [I] invite all the people of the state of Illinois and all strangers
in their midst, to set apart Thursday, the Twenty-eight day of November A. D.
1872 as the holy day of giving thanks to the Father of all for the mercies He
has bestowed upon us.”
Churches held early morning services;
businesses were closed although restaurants were open and advertised their
lunches or dinners. In 1874, The Daily
Herald wrote a small article about Ed Lehman’s restaurant at Fourth and
Hampshire saying, “Right here you could find all the delicacies of the season,
consisting in part of roast turkey, cranberries, celery, oysters, fine cake and
in fact everything nice. Ed is an old hand at the business….” Two days after
Thanksgiving in 1877, the Quincy Daily Herald had four Thanksgiving notices in
their “Items in Brief” column. First they said the weather was disagreeable,
then there were not as many turkeys that year, then Mr. Hamilton gave a dinner
at his residence on Hampshire, and finally, “The Tremont served a grand
Thanksgiving dinner Thursday. The dining room was crowded with strangers and
citizens.”
By 1881, Illinois had six legal
holidays. New Year’s Day began the year, followed by Washington’s Birthday,
Decoration Day, which was May 30, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving and
Christmas. The Quincy Daily Herald ran an amusing editorial in 1882 which
started with “Gentle reader, this is Thanksgiving day. …The turkey we ate last
Thanksgiving day must have been two or three thousand years old. We remember it
well. … Our Thanksgiving turkey this year will be a stuffed rabbit. … National
banks and some stores close on Thanksgiving day. Some newspaper offices close
on Thanksgiving day also, but the Herald office doesn’t. It is a cold day when
the Herald office closes.”
Sources
“By Telegraph.” Quincy Whig, October 10, 1863, 1.
“Dangers of Acids and Alcohols.” Quincy Whig, December 6, 1856, 1.
History.com Editors. “Thanksgiving 2020.” Last Modified November 20, 2020. https://www.history.com/topics/thanksgiving/history-of-thanksgiving
“Items in Brief.” Quincy Daily Herald , December 1, 1877, 1.
“Miscellaneous Items.” Quincy Whig , December 10, 1864, 1.
“Miscellaneous Items.” Quincy Whig , December 24, 1864, 1.
“News and Notions.” Quincy Daily Herald , December 20, 1881, 1.
“Origin of Thanksgiving.” Quincy Daily Whig , December 4, 1865, 1.
“Saturday, January 1.” Quincy Daily Whig , January 1, 1859, 1.
“Thanksgiving: Proclamation by the Governor.” Quincy Daily Whig , November 22, 1874, 1.
“Thanksgiving Day.” Quincy Daily Herald , November 30, 1882, 1.
“Thanksgiving Lunch.” Quincy Daily Herald , November 28, 1874, 1.
“Unique to The Last.” Quincy Whig , December 3, 1850, 1.





