Embrace the Past...
With Thanksgiving comes a special time to embrace the past. The feast of which we are most familiar took place when the Pilgrims arrived and the Wampanoag Indians gathered in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1621. This was a time of autumn celebration and that's right, it took place in the 17th century!
A banquet of harvest tradition
Venison, goose, duck, and eel
A cornucopia of fruits
There were no potatoes
Indeed more beer than water
But what about the popcorn?
Not until over a century later
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The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth by Jennie A. Brownscombe. (1914) A mythologized painting showing Plymouth settlers feasting with Plains Indians. en.wikipedia.org |
With Thanksgiving comes a special time to embrace the past. The feast of which we are most familiar took place when the Pilgrims arrived and the Wampanoag Indians gathered in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1621. This was a time of autumn celebration and that's right, it took place in the 17th century!
Within the history of Thanksgiving lies nuggets of trivia that nudge at the heart and tickle the funny bone.
Did you know...
Did you know...
- Turkey may not have been the main meat that filled the guests' bellies at the first feast?
- George Washington declared Thanksgiving to be a February holiday?
- Fledgling colonists lacked butter and wheat flour for baking, thus no pumpkin pie?
- Whether mashed or roasted, white or sweet, potatoes had no place at the first Thanksgiving?
- While cranberries were plentiful, in wasn't until 50 years later that sauces and relishes were made with the tart orbs?
"Although Thanksgiving celebrations dated back to the first European settlements in America, it was not until the 1860s that Abraham Lincoln declared the last Thursday of November to be a national holiday" (History of Thanksgiving. (2012). The History Channel website. Retrieved 9:52, November 20, 2012, from http://www.history.comhttp://www.history.com/videos/history-of-the-thanksgiving-holiday.)
What about corn?
So far there has been no mention of corn: roasted, boiled or popped. While corn and kidney beans were staples of the Pilgrim's diet, is it possible there was no corn gracing the table of that first Thanksgiving feast? If it was present, i.e., Indian corn, it presented itself in a form much different from that which we are familiar today. From this, a thought is interjected:
Popcorn is prevalent today as one of America's favorite snacks but . . .
So far there has been no mention of corn: roasted, boiled or popped. While corn and kidney beans were staples of the Pilgrim's diet, is it possible there was no corn gracing the table of that first Thanksgiving feast? If it was present, i.e., Indian corn, it presented itself in a form much different from that which we are familiar today. From this, a thought is interjected:
Popcorn is prevalent today as one of America's favorite snacks but . . .
Did Pilgrims Eat Popcorn?
Some believe to this day
Popcorn was a “parched” treat
Brought by the Indians
A banquet of harvest tradition
Surpasses any myth of yore
Hearty, bountiful plenty
Venison, goose, duck, and eel
Beckoned the most squeamish lad
Time of rejoicing and feasting
A cornucopia of fruits
Berries, grapes, apples, and plums
Competed with homegrown veggies
There were no potatoes
Pumpkin pie hadn’t been invented
Bread puddings, milk, and honey
Indeed more beer than water
Quenched the harshest of thirsts
With gin and wine not far behind
But what about the popcorn?
Were pilgrims the early munchers
Of that salty, puffed corn treat
Not until over a century later
Did sweet yellow corn none the least
Become the corn that traditionally “popped”
As part of a Thanksgiving feast