Yes, there were invited guests to the Pilgrims' first Thanksgiving. They were those whom Massassoit [c. 1581-1661] chose to accompany him. Massassoit led the Pokanoket indians, who belonged to the area's Wampanoag Confederacy. Massassoit had much to celebrate. Earlier in the year, on March 22, 1621, he had concluded with the Pilgrlims a peace treaty that was favorable to his confederacy, and unfriendly to the rival area Narragansett indians.
Yes, the Wampanoag Native Americans joined the Pilgrims for the first Thanksgiving celebration. They played a crucial role in helping the Pilgrims with farming, hunting, and fishing, and they also brought food to share. The celebration was a way to give thanks for a successful harvest and to foster goodwill and friendship between the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag.
The Pilgrims' first Thanksgiving dinner included potatoes, fowl, and beans. I'm not so sure they had rice.
Well where else would they plant corn?
Somebody else would have. And we wouldn't have Thanksgiving.
According to Historians, the Pilgrims spent Thanksgiving preparing for a large feast by hunting wild game and preparing favorite dishes in celebration of their harvest. The Pilgrims also invited the native Indians to join them in the feast since the Indians helped the Pilgrims survive the first harvest. For the most part, the Pilgrims ate and played games with each other and the Indians.
the DIfference is that give it to me mneans do not give to anybody else. THe give me it means you can give it anybody else. But give to me first.
Anybody Else But You was created on 2011-01-30.
I Don't Know Anybody Else was created on 1990-12-18.
No. Thanksgiving is a purely American holiday, it's not celebrated anywhere else
Ireland does not celebrate Thanksgiving at all. It is US and Canadian holiday. Nobody else celebrates it. The Irish living in America, celebrate Thanksgiving the same as everyone else.
Nobody did as Hagrid is too large to fit anybody else in the boat with him!
eating turkey...what else?