Good morning Phoenix – it’s Hump Day, which also means it’s
Wacky Wednesday! So – here’s some top 10 facts about Thanksgiving for your
enjoyment:
• The first TV Dinner was Thanksgiving leftovers: In 1953,
someone at Swanson severely overestimated the amount of turkey Americans would
consume that Thanksgiving. With 260 tons of frozen birds to get rid of, a
company salesman named Gerry Thomas ordered 5,000 aluminum trays, recruited an
assembly line of women armed with spatulas and ice-cream scoops and began
creating mini-feasts of turkey, corn-bread dressing, peas and sweet potatoes —
creating the first-ever TV dinner. Thomas later said he got the idea from
neatly packaged airplane food.
• FDR tried to change the date: FDR learned the hard way not
to mess with some traditions. In 1939, the President declared that Americans
should celebrate the annual feast one week early, hoping the decision would
spur retail sales during the Great Depression. But Americans did not react
kindly to the New Deal meal. Some took to the streets while others took to
name-calling; the mayor of Atlantic City solved the controversy by declaring
his residents would simply enjoy two meals — Thanksgiving and
"Franksgiving." After two years of squabbling (or gobbling, as it
were), Congress adopted a resolution in 1941 setting the fourth Thursday of
November as the legal holiday.
• Mary Had a Little Thanksgiving Obsession: The woman who
wrote the classic nursery rhyme "Mary Had a Little Lamb" also played
an integral role in making Thanksgiving a national holiday. After a 17-year
letter-writing campaign, magazine editor Sarah Josepha Hale finally convinced
President Abraham Lincoln to issue an 1863 decree recognizing the historic
tradition.
• We Eat a lot of Turduckens: Thanks to the culinary genius
of Louisiana (or Wyoming or South Carolina — each region has staked its claim),
more and more Americans are forsaking Butterballs for Turduckens. A what?
Picture this: a turkey stuffed with a duck stuffed with a chicken. It's like a
Russian nesting doll only with poultry. One store in Louisiana claims to ship
more than 5,000 turduckens the week before the feast. Though this may seem like
sacrilege to some, the original Thanksgiving meal featured fish, oysters, eel
and lobster as well as wild turkey. Other modern pilgrims settle for a tofu
version ("tofurkey") or the wildly dangerous "deep-fried
turkey."
• There’s debate over which President first pardoned a
turkey: The annual White House tradition of pardoning a turkey before
Thanksgiving began in 1947, when President Harry Truman took pity on one lucky
fowl. Other historians say the practice began during the 1860s, when Abraham
Lincoln granted a pardon to a pet turkey belonging to his son, Tad. The
tradition may alleviate some of America's guilt, but it doesn't stop us from
slaughtering more than 46 million turkeys for the holiday. Even so, as former
Alaska Governor Sarah Palin once proved during an interview in her hometown,
Americans prefer public acts of mercy to massacres.
• Thanksgiving was meant to be a fast: Thanksgiving was
initially meant to be a fast, not a feast. The devout settlers at Plymouth Rock
mostly recognized "giving of thanks" in the form of prayer and
abstaining from food. But the Wampanoag Indians, who joined the pilgrims for their
3-day celebration, contributed their own harvest traditions — dancing, games
and feasting — from their ancient festival, Nickommoh, meaning "to give
away" or "exchange.
• Thanksgiving was once celebrated in London: In 1942,
London's Westminster Abbey held Thanksgiving services for U.S. troops stationed
in England. More than 3,500 soldiers filled the church's pews to sing America,
the Beautiful and The Star-Spangled Banner — the first time in the church's
900-year history that a foreign army was invited to take over the grounds. It
was an ironic gesture given the holiday's origins as a festival for pilgrims
fleeing religious tyranny in Britain.
• Thanksgiving was a slow-roasting holiday: While the first
Thanksgiving was held in 1621, it would take more than 150 years before all 13
colonies celebrated Thanksgiving at once, in October 1777. In 1789, George
Washington hailed the holiday, while President Thomas Jefferson scoffed at the
notion, calling Thanksgiving "the most ridiculous idea" ever
conceived. For his part, Benjamin Franklin had such an affinity for turkey that
he lobbied to make it the national bird (to no avail).
• There are 3 towns named turkey: Three towns have been
named after the holiday's starring player — Turkey, Texas, Turkey Creek, La.
and Turkey, N.C. — each with less than 500 residents. Legend has it that the
pheasant's name came from the wayward traveler Christopher Columbus, who
thought he was in India when he arrived in "The New World" and,
hence, dubbed the pheasant a "tuka," an Indian term for peacock. The
name stuck.
• The Detroit Lions always play on Thanksgiving:
Thanksgiving is ruled by two very powerful f-words: "food" and
"football." Nearly as old as the sport itself, the tradition of
watching football on Thanksgiving began in 1876, when the newly formed American
Intercollegiate Football Association held its first championship game. Less
than a decade later, more than 5,000 club, college and high school football
teams held games on Thanksgiving, with match-ups between Princeton and Yale drawing
more than 40,000 fans out from their dining rooms. 1934 marked the first NFL
game held on Thanksgiving when the Detroit Lions took on the Chicago Bears. The
Lions have played on Thanksgiving ever since — except, of course, when the team
was called away to serve during World War II.
Have a fangtastic day my friends! <3 Brock V"""V
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