By: HISTORY.com Editors

Thanksgiving 2025

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Published: October 27, 2009Last Updated: March 02, 2025

Thanksgiving Day is a national holiday in the United States, and, in 2024, falls on Thursday, November 27. In 1621, the Plymouth colonists from England and the Native American Wampanoag people shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies.

For more than two centuries, days of thanksgiving were celebrated by individual colonies and states. It wasn’t until 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, that President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national Thanksgiving Day to be held each November. But the holiday is not without controversy. Many Americans—including people of Native American ancestry—believe Thanksgiving celebrations mask the true history of oppression and bloodshed that underlies the relationship between European settlers and Native Americans.

Thanksgiving at Plymouth

In September 1620, a small ship called the Mayflower left Plymouth, England, carrying 102 passengers—an assortment of religious separatists seeking a new home where they could freely practice their faith and other individuals lured by the promise of prosperity and land ownership in the "New World." After a treacherous and uncomfortable crossing that lasted 66 days, they dropped anchor near the tip of Cape Cod, far north of their intended destination at the mouth of the Hudson River. One month later, the Mayflower crossed Massachusetts Bay, where the Pilgrims, as they are now commonly known, began the work of establishing a village at Plymouth.

Did you know?

Lobster, seal and swans were on the Pilgrims' menu.

Throughout that first brutal winter, most of the colonists remained on board the ship, where they suffered from exposure, scurvy and outbreaks of contagious disease. Only half of the Mayflower’s original passengers and crew lived to see their first New England spring. In March, the remaining settlers moved ashore, where they received an astonishing visit from a member of the Abenaki tribe who greeted them in English.

Several days later, he returned with another Native American, Squanto, a member of the Pawtuxet tribe who had been kidnapped by an English sea captain and sold into slavery before escaping to London and returning to his homeland on an exploratory expedition. Squanto taught the Pilgrims, weakened by malnutrition and illness, how to cultivate corn, extract sap from maple trees, catch fish in the rivers and avoid poisonous plants. He also helped the settlers forge an alliance with the Wampanoag, a local tribe, which endured for more than 50 years and remains one of the few examples of harmony between European colonists and Native Americans.

When Was 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.

In November 1621, after the Pilgrims’ first corn harvest proved successful, Governor William Bradford organized a celebratory feast and invited a group of the fledgling colony’s Native American allies, including the Wampanoag chief Massasoit. Now remembered as America’s “first Thanksgiving”—although the Pilgrims themselves may not have used the term at the time—the festival lasted for three days. While no record exists of the first Thanksgiving’s exact menu, much of what we know about what happened at the first Thanksgiving comes from Pilgrim chronicler Edward Winslow, who wrote:

Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together, after we had gathered the fruits of our labors; they four in one day killed as much fowl, as with a little help beside, served the Company almost a week, at which time amongst other Recreations, we exercised our Arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five Deer, which they brought to the Plantation and bestowed on our Governor, and upon the Captain and others. And although it be not always so plentiful, as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want, that we often wish you partakers of our plenty.

Historians have suggested that many of the dishes were likely prepared using traditional Native American spices and cooking methods. Because the Pilgrims had no oven and the Mayflower’s sugar supply had dwindled by the fall of 1621, the meal did not feature pies, cakes or other desserts, which have become a hallmark of contemporary celebrations

Origins of Thanksgiving National Holiday

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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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Pilgrims held their second Thanksgiving celebration in 1623 to mark the end of a long drought that had threatened the year’s harvest and prompted Governor Bradford to call for a religious fast. Days of fasting and thanksgiving on an annual or occasional basis became common practice in other New England settlements as well.

During the American Revolution, the Continental Congress designated one or more days of thanksgiving a year, and in 1789 George Washington issued the first Thanksgiving proclamation by the national government of the United States; in it, he called upon Americans to express their gratitude for the happy conclusion to the country’s war of independence and the successful ratification of the U.S. Constitution. His successors John Adams and James Madison also designated days of thanks during their presidencies.

In 1817, New York became the first of several states to officially adopt an annual Thanksgiving holiday; each celebrated it on a different day, however, and the American South remained largely unfamiliar with the tradition.

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.

In 1827, the noted magazine editor and prolific writer Sarah Josepha Hale—author, among countless other things, of the nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb”—launched a campaign to establish Thanksgiving as a national holiday. For 36 years, she published numerous editorials and sent scores of letters to governors, senators, presidents and other politicians, earning her the nickname the “Mother of Thanksgiving.”

Abraham Lincoln finally heeded her request in 1863, at the height of the Civil War, in a proclamation entreating all Americans to ask God to “commend to his tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife” and to “heal the wounds of the nation.”

He scheduled Thanksgiving for the final Thursday in November, and it was celebrated on that day every year until 1939 when Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the holiday up a week in an attempt to spur retail sales during the Great Depression. Roosevelt’s plan, known derisively as Franksgiving, was met with passionate opposition, and in 1941 the president reluctantly signed a bill making Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday in November.

Thanksgiving Food

In many American households, the Thanksgiving celebration has lost much of its original religious significance; instead, it now centers on cooking and sharing a bountiful meal with family and friends. Turkey, a Thanksgiving staple so ubiquitous it has become all but synonymous with the holiday, may or may not have been on offer when the Pilgrims hosted the inaugural feast in 1621.

Today, however, nearly 90 percent of Americans eat the bird—whether roasted, baked or deep-fried—on Thanksgiving, according to the National Turkey Federation. Other traditional foods include stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie. Volunteering is a common Thanksgiving Day activity, and communities often hold food drives and host free dinners for the less fortunate.

Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

‘Andy the Alligator’ in the 1933 parade seems dwarfed in size compared to the balloons of today.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Mickey Mouse made his first debut in this 1934 parade. The original caption that ran in the NY Daily News for this photo read, the “parade was so large this year it took an hour to pass”.

NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

According to the NY Daily News, this 1937 parade featured seven musical organizations, twenty-one floats and balloon units and 400 costumed marchers.

Walter Kelleher/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The Tin Man made his debut months after the release of “The Wizard of Oz” in 1939. This photo was taken from the sixth story of a Times Square building as the parade went past.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The crew prepare to erect the giant inflatable Macy’s clown for the Macy’s Parade in 1942.

Weegee/International Center of Photography/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

It’s still tradition today for New Yorkers to watch the balloons being inflated and prepared the night before the big show.

Art Whittaker/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

An NBC camera set up to film the 1945 parade from a rooftop.

NBC/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Kids were delighted by the clowns and costumes that walked along Central Park West at Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, 1949.

George Torrie/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

This helium-filled Space Cadet, coming in at 70 feet tall, was indicative of the newest adventure interests of America’s kids in 1952.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Not all animals were larger than life balloons. A group of elephants participated in the 1954 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

NBC/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Radio City Rockettes filled stockings on this 1958 parade float.

Hal Mathewson/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

The Thanksgiving Turkey accompanied by a marching band make their way through Times Square, 1959.

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Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

It wouldn’t be the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade as we know it without a performance by the Rockettes, 1964.

NBC/Getty Images

Parades have also become an integral part of the holiday in cities and towns across the United States. Presented by Macy’s department store since 1924, New York City’s Thanksgiving Day parade is the largest and most famous, attracting more than 3 million spectators along its 2.5-mile route and drawing an enormous television audience. It typically features marching bands, performers, elaborate floats conveying various celebrities and giant balloons shaped like cartoon characters.

Beginning in the mid-20th century and perhaps even earlier, the president of the United States has “pardoned” one or two Thanksgiving turkeys each year, sparing the birds from slaughter and sending them to a farm for retirement. A number of U.S. governors also perform the annual turkey pardoning ritual.

History of the Thanksgiving Day Parade

The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has been marching since 1924.

Thanksgiving Controversies

For some scholars, the jury is still out on whether the feast at Plymouth really constituted the first Thanksgiving in the United States. Indeed, historians have recorded other ceremonies of thanks among European settlers in North America that predate the Pilgrims’ celebration.

In 1565, for instance, the Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilé invited members of the local Timucua tribe to a dinner in St. Augustine, Florida, after holding a mass to thank God for his crew’s safe arrival. On December 4, 1619, when 38 British settlers reached a site known as Berkeley Hundred on the banks of Virginia’s James River, they read a proclamation designating the date as “a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God.”

Some Native Americans and many others take issue with how the Thanksgiving story is presented to the American public, and especially to schoolchildren. In their view, the traditional narrative paints a deceptively sunny portrait of relations between the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag people, masking the long and bloody history of conflict between Native Americans and European settlers that resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands. Since 1970, protesters have gathered on the day designated as Thanksgiving at the top of Cole’s Hill, which overlooks Plymouth Rock, to commemorate a “National Day of Mourning.” Similar events are held in other parts of the country.

Thanksgiving's Ancient Origins

Although the American concept of Thanksgiving developed in the colonies of New England, its roots can be traced both to Native Americans, as well as back to the other side of the Atlantic.

Both the Separatists who came over on the Mayflower and the Puritans who arrived soon after brought with them a tradition of providential holidays—days of fasting during difficult or pivotal moments and days of feasting and celebration to thank God in times of plenty.

As an annual celebration of the harvest and its bounty, moreover, Thanksgiving falls under a category of festivals that spans cultures, continents and millennia. In ancient times, the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans feasted and paid tribute to their gods after the fall harvest. Thanksgiving also bears a resemblance to the ancient Jewish harvest festival of Sukkot.

Finally, historians have noted that Native Americans had a rich tradition of commemorating the fall harvest with feasting and merrymaking long before Europeans set foot on America's shores.

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Citation Information

Article title
Thanksgiving 2025
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
September 26, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
March 02, 2025
Original Published Date
October 27, 2009

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