About half of the 60 Pilgrims had died when the Native Americans began to provide help, so there would have been more Native Americans.
more indians
pilgrims...
yes the Indians attended the first thanksgiving.
In 1621, the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged today as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies. For more than two centuries, days of thanksgiving were celebrated by individual colonies and states. It wasn't until 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, that President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national Thanksgiving Day to be held each November.
They didn't. Thanksgiving is the white mans holiday. The pilgrims and the Indians of the eastern regions of the U.S. may have celebrated. The Apache were not around the eastern coast when the pilgrims landed. Apache Bands were more mountain region until the fighting with the Comanche drove the Apache south into Arizona, New Mexico, Mexico, Texas, and Colorado. Down into the dry desert areas.
Thanksgiving is a time when the Pilgrims came to America and celebrated by having a feast with some Native Americans in the area that helped them get food. It was a huge feast with many people there. Today we celebrate Thanksgiving as a time to get together with family or friends. Turkey is definitely a popular food on Thanksgiving!Thanksgiving is a feast of thanksgiving, held on the fourth Thursday in November in the United States, and the second Monday in October in Canada. Traditionally, it is held to remember the celebration by the Pilgrims of the first harvest in the new North American colony. For more information on the history and original meaning of Thanksgiving, see the related question on how Thankgiving originated.The Pilgrims wanted to invite the Indians and to thank The LORD and Divine Providence for helping them survive in The New World.
We have more variety of foods to choose from than the pilgrims had. Also, our traditions have gradually changed over the years.
All the foods that the Native Americans and the Pilgrims had at their disposal were eaten at the first Thanksgiving. It was a multiple day feast. And when the Pilgrims ran out of food the Native Americans came back with more. The food consisted of but was not limited to; venison, goose, turkey, fish, and corn, as well as both Native and English dishes.
There were more than 3 people that were at first thanksgiving. The people there were the pilgrims they all arrived in a group so its hard to pinpoint the first 3.
The native Americans more than likely wore some form of tanned hides in forms of shirts, dresses, etc. They may have decorated their hair and clothes with bones and feathers of animals they hunted. Some may have had beads and metal accessories from previous trading.
You could say "holiday," but there isn't a specific common noun for Thanksgiving.
Pilgrims needed more wood in the winter than the summer. In the summer, wood would be needed for building and cooking. Scholastic has a wonderful website on the Pilgrims, the Wampanog and the First Thanksgiving. It talks about chores including firewood.