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Some punkins : a Thanksgiving ballad

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Some punkins : a Thanksgiving ballad

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Summary

Published as title illustration in "Some Punkins. A Thanksgiving Ballad" by Arthur Guiterman, Good Housekeeping, 53:690 (Nov. 1911).
(DLC/PP-1934:0109).
Forms part of: Cabinet of American illustration (Library of Congress).

In the United States Thanksgiving is observed on the fourth Thursday in November. In Canada - on the second Monday of October. The tradition of Thanksgiving started with the Pilgrims who settled at Plymouth, Massachusetts. They first held a celebration of their harvest in 1621. The first national Thanksgiving Day was proclaimed by President George Washington in 1789. It became a holiday in 1863 when Abraham Lincoln declared that the last Thursday in November should be celebrated as Thanksgiving. Since then it has been celebrated every year and is an official federal holiday that was moved to the fourth Thursday of November in 1941 by President Franklin Roosevelt. Many cities have large parades on Thanksgiving Day. Perhaps the largest and most famous parade is the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City. Another popular way to spend the day is watching NFL football. The traditional food for the Thanksgiving meal includes a turkey, cranberry sauce, potatoes, sweet potato casserole, stuffing, vegetables, and pumpkin pie. Each year a live turkey is presented to the President of the United States who then "pardons" the turkey and it gets to live out its life on a farm.

date_range

Date

01/01/1911
person

Contributors

Adams, John Wolcott, 1874-1925, artist
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Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Publication may be restricted. For information see "Cabinet of American Illustration," http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/111_cai.html

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