Thanksgiving is a national holiday in the United States of America, stemming from the import of European harvest festivals by the founders of the first colonies.
In Britain, the harvest festival is celebrated in early October, it's timing based on the autumnal equinox of the moon (aka, 'Harvest Moon'), but it is mostly a religious festival and has no cultural significance.
Thanksgiving Day is not a national holiday in England.
Thanksgiving is an American festival. It is not celebrated at all in England.
absoluly nothing. It is the start as the holiday shopping season. Nothing to do with thanksgiving
Thanksgiving is an American celebration and isn't held in England, except maybe by American ex-pats.
Thanksgiving is a CANADA , Granada , Netherlands, & US celebration and not officially celebrated in England area although they have a type of thanksgiving where they bring local food to churches etc for poor people... but no Thanksgiving day as such.
Not a lot. Apart from UK citizens living here, we do not celebrate Thanksgiving.
Thanksgiving is not celebrated in England (or any other part of the UK). The only similar celebration in the UK is a Harvest Festival, but this is purely a religious festival (as was the original American Thanksgiving).
nothing....
In England,such a holiday does not exist nor is it celebrated/Commemorated.
I don't think England celebrates Thanksgiving because it's an American holiday. The pilgrims came to America and ate dinner with the Indians.
No of course not, the Americans celebrate Thanksgiving because people came here on the mayflower. People of Turkey have nothing to do with Thanksgiving!
Nothing!