The Invention of Thanksgiving
The New YorkerMassacres, myths, and the making of the great November holiday.
Read when you’ve got time to spare.
Impress your dinner guests with this collection of surprising Thanksgiving histories, from how eels were served at the first Thanksgiving to the time that Mikhail Gorbachev cut a Pizza Hut ad on Thanksgiving Day.
Image by KaLi_ua/Getty Images
Massacres, myths, and the making of the great November holiday.
The history of the holiday meal tells us that turkey was always the centerpiece, but other courses have since disappeared.
In the runup to the Civil War, there was strong resistance in the South toward Thanksgiving itself.
The author of the children's poem "Mary Had a Little Lamb" was persistent in arguing that establishing the national November holiday could help heal wounds from the Civil War.
The history of Cucurbita pepo has a surprising connection to the abolitionist cause.
Before trick-or-treating came along, there was "Thanksgiving masking" and "Ragamuffin Day.”
At one point, turkey was jockeying with duck and chicken for king of the Thanksgiving table.
This was, first lady Grace Coolidge later wrote, “no ordinary raccoon.”
Tofu turkey was created in 1990, but some Americans celebrated Thanksgiving with veggie dishes over a century ago.
Before Friendsgiving, there was Franksgiving.
Come on a trip through America’s second-most absurd tradition, right after the Electoral College.
How John Hughes made a 1987 buddy comedy/road movie that doubles as a rare Turkey Day classic.
In 1997, the former Soviet leader needed money, and Pizza Hut needed a spokesman. Greatness ensued.