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Editorials - 11/27/03Give thanks to George Washington for Thanksgiving |
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Most Americans don't know it and chilren aren't taught
it, but George Washngton is responsible for our Thanksgiving holiday.
It was our first president who led the charge to make this day of thanks
a truly national event - not the Pilgrims and not Abraham Lincoln.
Washington issued his Thanksgiving Proclamation on Oct. 3, 1789, designating for "the People of the United States a day of public thanks-giving" to be held on "Thursday the 26th day of November," 1789, marking the first national celebration of a holiday that has become commonplace in today's households. While subsequent presidents failed to maintain this tradition, it was Washington's original Proclamation that guided Lincoln's 1863 Thanksgiving Proclamation, and Lincoln set Thanksgiving as the last Thursday of November after our first president's example. Washington first mentioned the possibility of a national Thanksgiving Day in a confidential letter to James Madison in August 1789 (just months after taking office), asking for his advice on approaching the Senate for their opinion on "a day of thanksgiving." By the end of September 1789, a resolution had been introduced to the House of Representatives requesting that "a joint committee of both Houses be directed to wait upon the President of the United States, to request that he would recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving." The committee put the resolution before the president and Washington issued the first national Thanksgiving Proclamation within days. Washington knew the value of a thanksgiving day long before he was elected president. During the Revolutionary War, he would order thanksgiving services for his troops after successful battles, as well as publicly endorse efforts by the Continental Congress to proclaim days of thanks, usually in recognition of military victories and alliances. The concept of thanksgiving was not new to the citizens of the new United States. Colonists even before the Pilgrims often established Thank Days to mark certain occasions. Thanksgiving was not made a legal holiday until 1941. Congress named the fourth Thursday in November as our national day of thanks in answer to public outcry over President Roosevelt's attempt to lengthen the Christmas shopping season by moving Thanksgiving from the traditional last Thursday to the third Thursday of November. |
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