One of the first feasts of thanksgiving celebrated in North America took place in Plymouth, MA, between Pilgrims and Wampanoag Indians in November 1621. At the time, approximately 40,000 people made up New England's Wampanoag Indians. In 2010, the number of people reporting they were Wampanoag alone was 1,392. They were among more than 2,553,566 people reporting their race as American Indian or Alaska Native alone in 2010.
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The United States celebrates Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday of each November. The way Americans celebrate the holiday has changed since colonists celebrated the first days of thanksgiving in Virginia and Massachusetts in the early 1600s. No longer strictly a holiday celebrating survival and the autumn harvest, Thanksgiving is now a time for families and friends to gather, enjoy a meal together, watch football, participate in charitable events, and begin the holiday shopping season.
Turkey is often the centerpiece of many traditional Thanksgiving dinners in the United States.
Early colonists celebrated several days of thanksgiving in the early 1600s, with our modern holiday tracing its roots to a celebration between Pilgrims and Wampanoag Indians in 1621. The early settlers of the Plymouth Colony gave thanks after surviving their first winter in North America, succeeding at their attempts at farming, and celebrating the colony's improved chances of surviving as a new winter season approached.
Colonists continued to celebrate religious days of thanksgiving throughout the colonial period, including a day of thanksgiving to celebrate the Continental Army's victory at the Battle of Saratoga in October 1777. After the American Revolution, President George Washington proclaimed that the new nation would celebrate its first thanksgiving on November 26, 1789. President James Madison proclaimed a day of thanksgiving on March 4, 1815, following the United States' victory in the War of 1812. Throughout the 1800s, states celebrated their own days of thanksgiving—often in November—independent of any proclamation by the federal government.
Following the Union victory at the Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863, and perhaps in response to Sarah Josepha Hale's lobbying, President Abraham Lincoln issued a thanksgiving proclamation on October 3, 1863. With the nation split in two by war, Lincoln urged Americans to give thanks and praise and "...commend to [our beneficent Father's] care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervently implore the interposition of the Almighty Hand to heal the wounds of the nation and to restore it as soon as may be consistent with Divine purposes to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and Union."
Throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s, presidents proclaimed days of Thanksgiving each year on the last Thursday of November. In 1939, with the nation in the grip of the Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the holiday earlier in the month (proclamation 2373) to benefit retailers who hoped Americans would spend more money if given additional time to shop for the holidays. While 32 states recognized Roosevelt's earlier Thanksgiving date, 16 refused to acknowledge the president's proclamation. For 2 years, Americans had a choice of two Thanksgiving days until Congress passed a joint resolution declaring the last Thursday of November to be the nation's legal Thanksgiving Day on October 6, 1941.
Today, our Thanksgiving holiday celebrations reflect our nation's increasingly diverse population. Feasts may include turkey, ham, or roast beef; Italian aranchini, Mexican chile relleno, Indian chicken vindaloo, or Vietnamese mì quảng; and a cornucopia of side dishes, vegetables, breads, and desserts.
You can learn more about the history of Thanksgiving and how we celebrate the holiday using census data and records. For example:
The first Thanksgiving 1621, by J.L.G. Ferris.
Turkey, Texas, had an estimated population of 316 in 2019.
A number of places in the United States have Thanksgiving-themed names, including: Pumpkin Center, North Carolina; Turkey Creek, Louisiana; Cranberry, Pennsylvania; Turkey, Texas; Pie Town, New Mexico; and Corn, Oklahoma.
Sarah Josepha Hale was born in Newport, NH, in 1788. When Hale began advocating for a national day of thanksgiving in the 1840s, she was already famous for her poetry ("Mary Had a Little Lamb") and effort to memorialize the American Revolution's Battle of Bunker Hill.
Hale had already successfully lobbied for the creation of thanksgiving holidays in the majority of states and territories when she wrote to President Abraham Lincoln in September 1863. She urged the president to create a national day of thanksgiving. The next month, Lincoln issued a proclamation that designated the last Thursday of November as a national thanksgiving holiday.
On December 26, 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a bill into law establishing the fourth Thursday of November as the nation's Thanksgiving holiday.
Sarah Josepha Hale, "The Woman Who Helped Put Thanksgiving on the Calendar."
National Congressional District Map for the 116th Congress.
Apportioning each states' representation in the U.S. House of Representatives and redrawing their congressional districts are two of the most important uses of the population data collected by the decennial census.
On November 15, 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a bill into law establishing that the Huntington-Hill Method would be used to apportion each state's congressional representatives following the 1940 Census. The Huntington-Hill Method has been used to apportion the House of Representatives ever since.