Thanksgiving Day is a harvest festival. Traditionally, it is a time to give thanks for the harvest and express gratitude in general. It is primarily a North American holiday which has generally become a national secular holiday with religious origins.
The date and location of the first Thanksgiving celebration is a topic of modest contention. Though the earliest attested Thanksgiving celebration was on September 8, 1565 in what is now Saint Augustine, Florida[1][2], the traditional "first Thanksgiving" is venerated as having occurred at the site of Plymouth Plantation, in 1621.
Today, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the second Monday of October in Canada and on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States. Thanksgiving dinner is held on this day, usually as a gathering of family members.
Here's the story, a man who is afraid of life, and afraid to die gets cancer. His life was rather tragic and he sees the memories of his favorite childhood moment one last time before passing on. In the song The End, the patient is waiting in the hospital bed, explaining how he loathes himself, how bad his life was, and unhappy he is, and in the next song DEAD! the doctors explain he has cancer. In the song This Is How I Disappear, he explains he did love a girl once in his life and that she just made his soon coming death even worse. In The Sharpest Lives, the patient explains how his alchoholism ruined his life and sucked everything out of him and in welcome to the black parade he remembers when his father took him to see a marching band. In the song he blacks out and goes into the black parade. In the song I Don't Love you, he once again talks about his girlfriend, but this time in a not so friendly way. In House Of Wolves, the black parade takes him to hell and warns him about his mistakes in life. In Cancer, the patient talks about how his condition is making him weak, then in Mama the patient sees a flashback from the leader of the black parade (Gerard's character). Mama tells the tale of 5 brothers (aka the band) who leave for world war 2. Their mother hates them, they send her letters and she finally replies and says I disown you, the following day they all die and when she finds out she is very sad. (Their mother is the woman with the gasmask.) Sleep is about the patient's fear of sleeping and never waking up, and Teenagers is not about the story at all actually. (Gerard felt it needed to be in the album with all the teenage violence nowadays.) Disenchanted is about the patient sitting at the end of his life, in the hospital bed, saying nothing was ever good, and he officially admits he doesn't want to die. In Famous Last Words, he tells his girlfriend he did love her after all, and he is not afraid of life anymore. The ending is open to interpretation. Some believe that the patient dies, some believe he comes to his senses and actually sees his girlfriend lying in the hospital bed. Gerard says "The more I thought about it, the more I thought maybe this is all in his head, maybe he has a choice to fight now" But if you want the short answer, it is the 3rd studio album by my chem.
How many pounds of turkey for creamed turkey sandwiches for 100 people?
There should be about 100 pounds of turkey for 100 people. There should be a pound of turkey for each person.
Halloween Celebrations, Past and Present?
People have a fascination with horror and the occult that never seems to expire. Westerns and musicals went out of style, but vampire and zombie movies remain popular each decade. It's no wonder that so many people celebrate Halloween, a holiday with roots in Celtic tradition.
In the distant past, Celtic people marked Halloween as Samhain Eve. It was the night before winter began on November 1st. People believed that spirits could move between the worlds of the living and the dead on Samhain Eve, according to Penn State University.
This gave witches greater powers and made elves more active than usual. To appear dead, Scottish teenagers wore masks or blackened their faces. Welsh people put food outside their homes for ghosts to eat, and turnips were carved into jack-o-lanterns. Some people also played pranks.

Today's Halloween traditions prove somewhat different. People attend costume parties, visit haunted houses and carve pumpkins. They also decorate their homes, bake cookies and enjoy haunted train rides. Various organizations hold pumpkin-carving contests in many towns and cities.
Meanwhile, children put on costumes and go trick-or-treating. They carry flashlights and buckets or bags to fill with candy. Homeowners switch on their porch lights and display pumpkins to show that they have candy to give out. Most trick-or-treating usually ends by 9 o'clock.
If they aren't busy handing out treats, some people watch horror movies at home or in theaters. Films like "Horror Hotel" and "The Lost Boys" can make the holiday more exciting and fun. Some radio stations in North America broadcast old Halloween radio dramas.
Primarily, people observe this holiday in Canada, Great Britain and the United States. Some smaller celebrations are held in parts of Australia, France and other countries on October 31st. One day later, Mexico observes a similar holiday known as the Day of the Dead.
Like most holidays, Halloween requires some preparation. In the days leading up to October 31st, many people buy costumes, flashlights, candy, pumpkins and decorations. Others rent movies or buy theater tickets. For most people, it is not considered a very expensive holiday.
In summary, there is something for almost everyone to enjoy on Halloween. Some people find holidays like Thanksgiving or Christmas stressful, but Halloween is generally a fun and carefree day. It also provides an opportunity to ponder the things we cannot explain.
What did the 53 Pilgrims eat at the first Thanksgiving?
They ate whatever crops they had such as corn and potatoes, and one turkey.
In the Thanksgiving parade who was the last person?
The last person in the Macy's Thansgiving Day Paradeis Santa Clause.
In what year did Thanksgiving become a federal holiday in the US?
It was signed into law in December 1941, to be in effect from 1942.
What is true, half true, or a complete fabrication we tell students about the first Thanksgiving?
We all know by nowâor at least we shouldâthat what our history textbooks told us in school is not exactly the gospel truth.
Time and centuriesâ worth of oral and written tradition tend to distort and reshape the facts to the sensibilities of modern audiences, so one personâs intrepid discoverer of the Americas becomes another personâs Lies My Teacher Told Me, calls them âSeparatists.â Because thatâs what they called themselves.
âThey had religious freedom in Holland. They were going to Massachusetts to make a buck,â Loewen says. âThey were not doing that economically well in Holland, plus their children were learning to speak Dutch. Thatâs going to happen to people who grow up in Holland. They wanted to learn to be more English, and they wanted to make money.â
In his book, Loewen writes that only about 35 of the 102 inhabitants of the Mayflower were even Pilgrimsâ¦or Separatists. The rest were just âordinary folk seeking their fortunes in the new Virginia colony.â Only they ended up in Massachusetts. The way in which that occurred is still open to interpretation: Some say poor weather blew them off course, but according to historian George Willison, the Pilgrims planned all along to end up in Massachusetts.
At any rate, the Pilgrims kept the colonists together through the Mayflower Compact, the first governing document of the Plymouth Colony and an impressive piece of political maneuvering in its own right. After a brutal winter spent on the ship, which wiped out nearly half of the colonists, they emerged ready to tame the New England wilderness.
Except it was pretty much tamed already. Plymouth had been a Wampanoag settlement before disease decimated its population shortly before the Pilgrimsâ arrival.
âThe Pilgrims wander into this situation where there are all these cleared fields and a nice spring,â Loewen says. âItâs ready to be a town because it was a town.â
The WampanoagThe Kernel of Truth: Once the Pilgrims disembarked, the areaâs current inhabitants, the Wampanoag, sent an English-speaking Patuxet envoy named Squanto to help the settlers acclimate to their new surroundings. In his âOf Plymouth Plantationâ account, Plymouth Colony Governor William Bradford called Squanto âa special instrument sent of Godâ because of his aid in teaching the Pilgrims how to plant corn, catch fish, and, basically, survive in the New World. He also helped broker a peace between the Pilgrims and Wampanoags that lasted more than 50 years.
The Rest of the Story: The relationship between the two sides was less a friendship and more a survival transaction. The Pilgrims got the Wampanoagâs agricultural know-how. The Wampanoag got an ally in case their real enemy, the Narragansett, got any ideas about attacking and clearing them out.
The Wampanoag were at a severely disadvantageous position militarily, with their population reduced drastically by the aforementioned bout with disease brought over by the Europeans, for which the natives had no immunity.
âThey were hospitable, but they werenât inexplicably hospitable, the way we portray them,â Loewen says. âThey were, shall we say, explicably hospitable. And the explication was the plague. They were very healthy, and therefore, they were prime suspects when a disease came around.â
By the time King Philipâs War rolled around in 1675, the Pilgrims and Wampanoag were, letâs say, at odds.
Squanto is a bit of a complicated figure as well. Loewen points out that most history textbooks just say Squanto learned English from fishermen he happened upon during his life. The truth is more thorny: He was kidnapped as a child by a British captain and taken to England. He arranged passage back to America but was then taken again and sold into slavery in Spain. He escaped from slavery and made it back to his homelandâ¦only to find that disease had extinguished his village.
As we have discussed before.
My daughter is learning about the Pilgrims and Squanto. Eventually we'll tell her about the small pox blankets, but not yet.
— (((Groove With It))) (@groove_with_it) November 9, 2010Loewen says relegating Squanto to a supporting character is part of the problematic ethnocentrism in Thanksgiving lore.
Plus, hereâs a fun fact from Feenie Zinerâs 1989 biography of Squanto: He tried to teach the Pilgrims to bathe regularly. He failed at that, though. They believed it unhealthy.
The First ThanksgivingThe Kernel of Truth: More than 100 combined Pilgrims and Wampanoag gathered for two or three days sometime between Sept. 21 and Nov. 11, 1621, said James Baker, the Plimoth Plantation vice president, in a 1996 interview with the Boston Globe. Kathleen Wall, a culinarian at Plimoth Plantation, told Time magazine that the festivities also included exhibitions such as foot races and shooting at targets. It was, indeed, meant as a celebration of the Pilgrimsâ first successful harvest in the New World.
The Rest of the Story: Okay, letâs take it word by word. First, âThanksgiving.â It probably wasnât called that back in 1621. The Pilgrims, in fact, used that term to denote a period of fasting and prayerânot stuffing their gobs with pumpkin pie. A Boston publisher named Alexander Young printed a book in 1841 containing a contemporary account of the event from Edward Winslow, who never described it as âThanksgiving.â Young did in a footnote, though, and the rest is history.
Next, âfirst.â It was not the first feast of its kind between natives and colonists in America. The Spanish and members of the Timucua tribe gathered for a celebratory dinner in St. Augustine, Florida, in 1565. In 1619, just two years prior to âThe First Thanksgiving,â a group of English settlers reached their destination in Virginia and proclaimed âa day of thanksgiving to Almighty God.â
âTheâ is fine. Letâs leave that one alone.
Our current Thanksgiving tradition doesnât even stretch back to 1621, but to the thick of the Civil War, in the fall of 1863. It was then, to commemorate Union victories in Vicksburg and Gettysburg, that President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation to make Thanksgiving a national holiday.
âOf course, Lincoln is not going to emphasize the settlement of the United States at Jamestown, Virginia, because we were at war with the state of Virginia. Naturally, heâs going to emphasize Massachusetts,â Loewen says. âThat doesnât mean the celebration that fall had anything significant to do with the Pilgrims. For that matter, they werenât even called Pilgrims until at least the 1870s.â
The push to make Thanksgiving a national holiday was aided immeasurably by the efforts of Sarah Josepha Hale. And who is Sarah Josepha Hale, you might ask? Oh, just the woman who penned âMary Had A Little Lamb.â
Mind blown yet? I know mine is.
And we donât really know how the Indians happened to be at this celebratory feast in 1621. Some historians maintain that they didnât exactly send in RSVPs.
âI think what happened is that natives happened by, and they invited them on the spur of the moment,â Loewen says. âThatâs fine, too. Letâs not make a big deal out of it. Weâre having a block party on my street around the time of Halloween, and weâre making sure that everybody on the block gets invited. If we miss somebody, well, weâll invite them when they come out to complain about the noise.â
The MenuThe Kernel of Truth: It was a fall feast, complete with all the fowl and vegetation the cultivated New England wilderness had to offer.
The Rest of the Story: Itâs interesting that Plimoth Plantation, the historical learning attraction that tries to recreate the everyday life of Plymouth Colony, has two separate Thanksgiving feast options for its guests.
The first one is the one youâre used to: turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, cornbread, apple cider, and pumpkin pie.
The second is the one that follows more closely with what historians know about that feast in 1621. It has some of the old favorites such as turkey and stuffing. It also has lobster bisque, green beans, fruits and nuts and Indian pudding, which is a combination of English pudding and cornmeal.
Historians who study contemporary accounts of the mealâs menu say that it was probably a lot heavier on seafood than we would suspect given our current traditions. Think eels, clams, and mussels. It was probably also a lot nuttierâchestnuts, walnuts, and beechnuts, to be specific. Wall, the Plimoth Plantation culinarian, also says that goose or duck was probably more plentiful than turkey for the hungry participants that first year.
And the Indians brought five freshly slain deer with them to the party. So thatâs fun.
An article on Smithsonian.com states that there probably werenât mashed potatoes, as white potatoes and sweet potatoes had not yet made their way to North America from South America and the Caribbean yet. And Wall told Smithsonian that there probably wasnât any pie, as the Pilgrims did not have the butter and flour necessary to make crust.
So where did our current Thanksgiving menu come from? That points back to Hale and the magazine she edited, Godeyâs Ladyâs Book. During her campaign to make Thanksgiving a national holiday in the 19th century, Hale would print recipes of dishes such as turkeys, stuffing and pumpkin pie, so that the countryâs women would be ready to get cooking once official word came down.
Discussion of the menu, too, has historically led to problematic ethnocentrism, according to Loewen. He includes an example in his book from Native American novelist Michael Dorris, whose son brought home an informational Thanksgiving handout from his elementary school adorned with pictures and captions such as âThey served pumpkins and turkeys and corn and squash. The Indians had never seen such a feast!â
The problem, as Loewen and Dorris point out, is that the Indians, in fact, had seen such a feast. Theyâre the ones who introduced the Pilgrims to this food in the first place.
âThink about that. Every single one of those foods is an Indian food,â Loewen says. âThe Pilgrims are the ones who had never seen such a feast. But here the history books have us providing nice stuff to the native people.â
In conclusionâ¦itâs complicated.The spirit of Thanksgiving, as we celebrate it today and distilled down to its most uncomplicated reading, can be as simple as the desire to gather with family and loved ones and share a hearty meal to give thanks for everything in our lives for which weâre grateful.
When you start to get into the history of why we do the things we do on Thanksgiving, it has more to do with a sense of 19th century nationalism and moralityâalong with a creeping 20th century commercialism with the Macyâs Thanksgiving Day Parade starting in 1924âthan it does with The First Thanksgiving story weâre taught about in elementary school.
And itâs a story that largely ignores the people on the other side of the table. The United American Indians of New England have been holding a National Day of Mourning on Thanksgiving since 1970, complete with fasting, marches, and political demonstrations to bring back to the forefront the toll that European colonization had on the Native American population.
Plimoth Plantation, for its part, is dedicated to telling the story of the Pilgrims and Indians from both sides, with the hope âthat by listening to the voices from both the colonial and the indigenous perspective, we will inspire not only a deeper understanding of our nation's past but also modern contemplation on todayâs multicultural America and the contributions of our ancestorsâindigenous and immigrant.â
âIt turns out that the very place that sparked this myth has now sparked some truth-telling to set it straight,â Loewen says.
What time does target open on weekends?
Target is usually open by 9AM every morning, 7 days a week.
Some stores are open earlier and some stay open later, depending n the store location. Click on the link below to go directly to the Target website:
Why do parade balloons lay down instead of straight up.?
Because there are people holding down the ballon, and if its straight up, you wont have alot of control.