By: HISTORY.com Editors

First Thanksgiving Meal

HISTORY: Thanksgiving
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Published: November 18, 2011Last Updated: May 28, 2025

For many Americans, the Thanksgiving meal includes seasonal dishes such as roast turkey with stuffing, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie. The holiday dates back to November 1621, when the newly arrived Pilgrims and the Wampanoag Indians gathered at Plymouth for an autumn harvest feast, an event regarded as America’s “first Thanksgiving.” But what was really on the menu at the famous banquet, and which of today’s time-honored favorites didn’t earn a place at the table until later in the holiday’s 400-year history?

Thanksgiving Turkey

The Thanksgiving Turkey

Deep frying turkeys is a southern trend that is now spreading across the United States.

While no records exist of the exact bill of fare, the Pilgrim chronicler Edward Winslow noted in his journal that the colony’s governor, William Bradford, sent four men on a “fowling” mission in preparation for the three-day event:

Did you know?

Many people report feeling drowsy after eating a Thanksgiving meal. Turkey often gets blamed because it contains tryptophan, an amino acid that can have a somnolent effect. But studies suggest it’s the carbohydrate-rich sides and desserts that allow tryptophan to enter the brain. In other words, eating turkey without the trimmings could prevent that post-Thanksgiving energy lull

Turkey or no turkey, the first Thanksgiving’s attendees almost certainly got their fill of meat. Winslow wrote that the Wampanoag arrived with an offering of five deer. Culinary historians speculate that the deer was roasted on a spit over a smoldering fire and that the colonists might have used some of the venison to whip up a hearty stew.

Fruits and Vegetables

Thanksgiving Becomes a Holiday

Early Puritans observed Thanksgiving days of prayer, but Sarah Josepha Hale's crusade for a national day of thanks is what ultimately gave us Thanksgiving.

The 1621 Thanksgiving celebration marked the Pilgrims’ first autumn harvest, so it is likely that the colonists feasted on the bounty they had reaped with the help of their Native American neighbors. Local vegetables that likely appeared on the table include onions, beans, lettuce, spinach, cabbage, carrots and perhaps peas. Corn, which records show was plentiful at the first harvest, might also have been served, but not in the way most people enjoy it now. In those days, the corn would have been removed from the cob and turned into cornmeal, which was then boiled and pounded into a thick corn mush or porridge that was occasionally sweetened with molasses.

Fruits indigenous to the region included blueberries, plums, grapes, gooseberries, raspberries and, of course cranberries, which Native Americans ate and used as a natural dye. The Pilgrims might have been familiar with cranberries by the first Thanksgiving, but they wouldn’t have made sauces and relishes with the tart orbs. That’s because the sacks of sugar that traveled across the Atlantic on the Mayflower were nearly or fully depleted by November 1621. Cooks didn’t begin boiling cranberries with sugar and using the mixture as an accompaniment for meats until about 50 years later.

Fish and Shellfish

Culinary historians believe that much of the Thanksgiving meal consisted of seafood, which is often absent from today’s menus. Mussels in particular were abundant in New England and could be easily harvested because they clung to rocks along the shoreline. The colonists occasionally served mussels with curds, a dairy product with a similar consistency to cottage cheese. Lobster, bass, clams and oysters might also have been part of the feast. Colonist Edward Winslow describes the bounty of seafood near Plymouth:

“Our bay is full of lobsters all the summer and affordeth variety of other fish; in September we can take a hogshead of eels in a night with small labor, and can dig them out of their beds all the winter. We have mussels... at our doors. Oysters we have none near, but we can have them brought by the Indians when we will.”

Potatoes

Whether mashed or roasted, white or sweet, potatoes had no place at the first Thanksgiving. After encountering it in its native South America, the Spanish began introducing the potato to Europeans around 1570. But by the time the Pilgrims boarded the Mayflower, the tuber had neither doubled back to North America nor become popular enough with the English to hitch a ride. New England’s native inhabitants are known to have eaten other plant roots such as Indian turnips and groundnuts, which they may or may not have brought to the party.

Pumpkin Pie

Both the Pilgrims and members of the Wampanoag tribe ate pumpkins and other squashes indigenous to New England—possibly even during the harvest festival—but the fledgling colony lacked the butter and wheat flour necessary for making pie crust. Moreover, settlers hadn’t yet constructed an oven for baking. According to some accounts, early English settlers in North America improvised by hollowing out pumpkins, filling the shells with milk, honey and spices to make a custard, then roasting the gourds whole in hot ashes.

Who Attended the First Thanksgiving?

The History of Thanksgiving

Although Thanksgiving celebrations dated back to the first European settlements in America, it was not until the 1860s that Abraham Lincoln declared the last Thursday of November to be a national holiday.

At the first Thanksgiving, colonists were likely outnumbered more than two to one by the Native Americans in attendance. Winslow writes: “many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men.” In fact, the Indigenous people at the feast would have been familiar with the tradition of “thanksgiving” since it was central to their regular spiritual practices—to give thanks for natural bounty.

The preceding winter had been a harsh one for the colonists. Seventy-eight percent of the women who had traveled on the Mayflower had perished that winter, leaving only around 50 colonists to attend the first Thanksgiving. According to eyewitness accounts, among the pilgrims, there were 22 men, just four women and over 25 children and teenagers.

Celebration of mass in 1565

The “first Thanksgiving” is often traced to Plymouth in 1621, though some credit a 1565 feast in Florida between Spanish settlers and the Timucua.

Credit: State Archives of Florida/Florida Memory
Thanksgiving Celebration at Plymouth Colony

The first Thanksgiving looked little like today’s feast. No roast turkey or potatoes—just deer, seafood, pumpkins and the first harvest, with the Wampanoag supplying much of the meal.

America’s first national thanksgiving marked the 1777 Saratoga victory. Washington later proclaimed one in 1789, and both sides revived the tradition during Civil War triumphs.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images
Thomas Jefferson. (Credit: VCG Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

Thomas Jefferson was the only early president to reject Thanksgiving proclamations, citing his belief in a strict separation of church and state.

VCG Wilson/Corbis/Getty Images

The first official Thanksgiving was declared in 1863 by Lincoln, after years of lobbying by Sarah Josepha Hale, abolitionist and author of Mary Had a Little Lamb.

Michael Nicholson/Corbis/Getty Images & Kean Collection

Pumpkin pie was on New England tables as early as the 1700s. In 1705, Colchester, Connecticut, even delayed Thanksgiving a week when a molasses shortage made pies impossible.

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Native Americans ate cranberries and used them as dye, but no sweet relish appeared at the 1621 feast—the pilgrims had no sugar. Jellied cranberry sauce arrived in 1912, leading to Ocean Spray.

Maren Caruso/Getty Images

In 1953, Swanson had 260 tons of leftover turkey. A salesman packaged it into frozen meals on aluminum trays—the first TV dinners. By 1954, 10 million turkey trays had sold.

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Football and Thanksgiving go way back—the first game was Yale vs. Princeton in 1876. By the 1890s, Thanksgiving had become the day for college and high school rivalries.

Presidents once ate the turkeys gifted to them, but JFK spared one in 1963. The official White House turkey “pardon” tradition began later, with George H.W. Bush in 1989.

Wally McNamee/Corbis/Getty Images

In 1926, President Coolidge was gifted a live raccoon for Thanksgiving dinner. Instead, his family kept her as a pet named Rebecca—joining their White House menagerie of exotic animals.

Harris & Ewing/PhotoQuest/Getty Images

Macy’s launched its first parade in 1924 to promote its Herald Square store. The hit event soon became the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, later shortened in route and broadcast by NBC.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

In 1927, Macy’s debuted its first giant parade balloons—designed by puppeteer Anthony Frederick Sarg—including Felix the Cat and other inflated animals, then filled with oxygen.

Underwood Archives/Getty Images

In 1939, FDR moved Thanksgiving up a week to extend holiday shopping. Dubbed “Franksgiving,” it split the nation until Congress set the holiday on the fourth Thursday in November in 1941.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Related Articles

A clerk removes cans of cranberry from the shelves in a supermarket in Jackson Heights, Queens, Nov. 10, 1959.

A health scare caused Americans (including President Eisenhower) to forgo serving cranberry sauce at their holiday tables.

Detail of illustration depicting Native American Squanto (a.k.a. Tisquantum), of the Patuxet tribe, serving as guide and interpreter for the Pilgrims at the Plymouth Colony, circa 1621.

Without Squanto, a.k.a. Tisquantum, to interpret and guide them to food sources, the Plymouth Colony Pilgrims may have never have survived.

From the earliest fall feasts to the first Thanksgiving football game to the Macy's Day parade, here's the full background on how the U.S. holiday evolved to the tradition it is today.

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Citation Information

Article title
First Thanksgiving Meal
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
October 01, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
May 28, 2025
Original Published Date
November 18, 2011

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