The Native American tribe that attended the first Thanksgiving was the Wampanoag Indians (pronouced Wamp-O-nogg) according to the 6th Grade New World History and Geography Book (published by Beka Books History Series).
The Native American tribe that attended the first Thanksgiving was the Wampanoag Indians (pronouced Wamp-O-nogg) according to the 6th Grade New World History and Geography Book (published by Beka Books History Series).
The Native American tribe that attended the first Thanksgiving was the Wampanoag Indians.
The first Indians to celebrate Thanksgiving were the Wampanoag tribe.
The Wampanoag tribe was at the first Thanksgiving.
The Wampanoag Indian tribe first celebrated Thanksgiving with the Pilgrims.
About 90 Native Americans from the Wampanoag tribe attended the first Thanksgiving dinner.
they did speacial dances
some traditions of the powhatan indian tribe are christmas, easter, thanksgiving, veterans day
The Wampanoag tribe was at the first Thanksgiving.
The Wampanoag Indian tribe first celebrated Thanksgiving with the Pilgrims.
About 90 Native Americans from the Wampanoag tribe attended the first Thanksgiving dinner.
About 90 Native Americans from the Wampanoag tribe attended the first Thanksgiving dinner.
the native indiands
Squanto was the famous the first Thanksgiving Indian that assisted the Pilgrims the first few years. He was a member of the Patuxent tribe.
wampanoag
they did speacial dances
Chief Massasoit, the leader of the Wamponoag village, attended the first Thanksgiving.That Thanksgiving was also attended by Samoset, who was the sagamore (secondary chief) of the Abenaki tribe, and Squanto. Squanto, also known as Tisquantum, was a Patuxet Indian who had been adopted into Massasoit's tribe after his own had been wiped out. Squanto was not a chief. However, he did assist the Pilgrims even though at one point he had been captured by the British and held as a slave.
some traditions of the powhatan indian tribe are christmas, easter, thanksgiving, veterans day
the Wapawong tribe
The Pilgrims, who celebrated the first thanksgiving in America, were fleeing religious persecution in their native England. In 1609 a group of Pilgrims left England for the religious freedom in Holand where they lived and prospered.