Thanksgiving 2020 - History, Meaning, Quotes, Message, Food: thanksgiving facts

Celebrating Turkey day is a time-honored American tradition for nearly 400 years in the making. So before that famous Powell takes its place center stage on our Thanksgiving tables.

Thanksgiving Day Bears its origin from the Harvest Festival. Generally, Americans give thanks to God for their Autumn Harvest and every other success they have achieved in the year. 

20 Interesting Facts Of Thanksgiving


Number 1

Thanksgiving Day in the US is observed on the fourth Thursday of November. The day was declared a federal holiday by Abraham Lincoln in 1863. It is also a day off to American workers.

According to historians as selling with a cell called Mayflower cross the Atlantic carrying about 100 True pilgrims. The journey was pulled. 

Because of the terrible storms in the sea after 66 days, they are live in five months and could not proceed to the initial intent destination virgin ear because of bad weather. 

In fact, about 46 pilgrims died in cold winter the survivors who learn how to grow food from squandering a native Indian.

Number 2

in 1939 President Roosevelt changed Thanksgiving Day moving it to the third Thursday instead of the last Thursday of November. The change was done in order to encourage people to shop more. During the Great Depression


Number 3


According to Time Magazine, President Thomas Jefferson hated the idea of Thanksgiving and thought it was the most ridiculous idea conceived

Number 4



Macy's Thanksgiving Parade started in 1924 every year since then it has been presented by Macy's and New York City on Thanksgiving Day.

Number 5

Did you know that Macy's Thanksgiving Parade includes over a dozen mess of balloons with Snoopy holding the record for the most appearances?

Number 6


supposedly in 1953. The idea of the first frozen dinner came up when Swanson company used 260 tons of it's Thanksgiving turkey leftovers and packed it along with peas sweet potatoes and cornbread stuffing.

Number 7


according to the American Automobile Association, nearly forty-two point five million Americans traveled a distance of 50 miles or more during the Thanksgiving weekend in 2011.

Number 8

46 million is our eight number and it's the number of turkeys. The National Turkey Federation expects Americans to eat on Thanksgiving.

Number 9


Next number and it's how much the American Farm Bureau estimates the average turkey dinner cost to feed a table of 10 people

Number 10

hold onto your Pilgrim hats because 4500 is the average number of calories a single person consumes on Thanksgiving. According to the calorie Control Council, 3000 of the calories are from the meal and 1500 come from the snacks appetizers, and drinks throughout the day.

Number 11


You're one of 48.5 million Americans estimated to travel more than 50 miles from home this year. The Stewart has told us that today is the busiest day busy travel day of the year. "AAA" expects a whopping forty-eight and a half million of those Travelers will be on the roads. So let's hope none of them On a Griswold family vacation.

Number 12

If you're in New York City joined the other three and a half million people who are expected to line the streets to watch the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.

Number 13


Speaking of Christmas and Thanksgiving, the song Jingle Bells was not originally written as a Christmas song, and it's commonly thought to have started as a Thanksgiving tune. The song was written in 1857 by an American man named James Pierpont under the original title of a one-horse open sleigh. Apparently, Pierpont wrote the song for a Thanksgiving performance at his father's Sunday school and proved so popular. It was also sung at Christmas, with which the song is since become more commonly associated.

Number 14

the Wednesday before Thanksgiving is the busiest single day of travel of the year in the US, with 37 percent of travelers departing for their trips the day before Thanksgiving.

Number 15


according to the American purveyor of books, Barnes& Noble. The day before Thanksgiving is also the day in which Americans read the most. Apparently, many Americans use books to entertain themselves and relieve stress while traveling home. Or simply as a way to distract themselves from the family drama.

Number 16

Additionally, the day before Thanksgiving is also the single biggest day for bar sales in the United States. People really do enjoy becoming Krunch the day before Thanksgiving. 

Thirty-one study into the cost of Thanksgiving concluded that the average American spends one hundred sixty-five point fourteen cents on Thanksgiving. Roughly 70 dollars of that goes towards travel costs and just over fifty-four dollars goes on food.


Number 17


Every Thanksgiving, Americans eat roughly 46 million turkeys. That's roughly one turkey for every seven Americans. 

Number 18

The reason as to why turkeys are called turkeys isn't entirely clear. But the most widely accepted theory is that hundreds of years ago, Europeans began importing guinea fowl, which the English call turkeys because they were brought by Turkish merchants. 

Later on, when Europeans travel to America and first encountered what we now call turkeys, they incorrectly assumed they were also guinea fowl and began calling them turkeys as well. Nowadays, the word generally refers only to the North American bird we all know and love and tolerate, even if it is too dry to dry. 

Number 19


The average weight of turkeys purchased for Thanksgiving dinner is around seven points two kilograms, or roughly six pounds the more.

Number 20


However, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, the heaviest turkey on record weight, a staggering 29 kilograms, or approximately 86 pounds. This enormous turkey was named Taison and was raised in Jacksonville, SYK. Tyson was raised in, of all places, Peterborough in England.

Number 21


Most of these come from the north state, a.k.a. Minnesota, where roughly 45 million turkeys have raised each year. Minnesota is followed by North Carolina in second, with thirty-five million Gobbler's and Arkansas in third place, producing around twenty-nine million boys a year. Thirty-seven. Speaking of gobbling, you may be interested to know that only male turkeys gobble female turkeys instead produce a quiet clucking sound 
Greetings, my name is Sam, and today I'm going to be talking to you all about something I've never experienced myself, but I've heard a lot about it. No, not that Thanksgiving. I've seen it in films and TV, but sadly, it's not celebrated here in Britain. Not to worry, though, because we have the queen's birthday. We don't get a day off for it, though, or a turkey dinner. That crop really. So I'm actually quite British in a way anyway. 


But why did Franklin D. Roosevelt try to change the date of Thanksgiving?

Why should you stay away from characters with hats in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade? 

Why would you make a pie out of pumpkins? 

Number One 

Thanksgiving is a national holiday celebrated in various states in various countries including but not limited to the United States, Canada, Liberia, and several of the Caribbean islands. For the purposes of this article, we're going to be focusing on American Thanksgiving.

Number Two

Thanksgiving began as a day of giving thanks. I know it for the blessing of the harvest and of the preceding year. Today, it's an occasion to spend time with family and loved ones and to be appreciative of all the good things in life like stuffing and mayonnaise. 

Number three 

In the United States, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November. This means that Thanksgiving can occur as early as the 22nd of November and as late as the twenty-eighth 

Number four

The modern celebration of Thanksgiving in the US usually involves a large meal known as Thanksgiving dinner. Not very imaginative names. Either way, which features a large roasted turkey, serve the variety of side dishes, including mashed potato stuffing and cranberry sauce. 

Number five

The common Thanksgiving traditions include attending or watching parades, giving to charity, and watching American football and Thanksgiving specials on TV as the Good Lord intended.

Number six

while prayers and celebrations are giving thanks exist in virtually all religions and cultures. The history of Thanksgiving in North America is rooted in English traditions of giving thanks dating back to the Protestant Reformation, in which critics of the Catholic Church broke off to form their own Christian denominations. 

Number seven

Some of these groups wanted to replace most of or all the traditional religious holidays with days of fasting and days of Thanksgiving. Days of fasting would be held in response to events perceived to indicate God's disapproval, whereas days of Thanksgiving would celebrate events perceived to indicate God's favor and mercy 

Number Eight

The story of Thanksgiving begins in the year 16 20, when a group of 102 English settlers, now known as the Pilgrims, traveled to America on the Mayflower and established the Plymouth Colony in Plymouth, Massachusetts. This was the second successful permanent settlement by the Europeans in what is now the United States following the founding of Jamestown, Virginia, and 67. 

Number Nine

Soon after they arrived, the settlers were taught how to catch eels and grow corn for the local Wampanoag tribe of Native Americans, contributing to the success of the colony.

Number Ten

The following year and 16 21, the pilgrims celebrated their bountiful harvest with an enormous feast held in early autumn in Plymouth, Massachusetts, and celebrated together by the pilgrims and the Native Americans. This is commonly recognized as the first-ever Thanksgiving.

Number Eleven

It's believed that this first Thanksgiving was attended by 50 pilgrims, just over half the settlers reaching America. In fact, some historians believe that as few as only five women were present at that first Thanksgiving. The first Thanksgiving was also attended by roughly 90 Wampanoag Indians. It was a proper old knee up.

Number Twelve

Unlike today's traditional Thanksgiving dinner, the very first Thanksgiving dinner did not feature Turkey as a main cooked Avión. The first Thanksgiving dinner was probably centered around a cooked duck, goose. 

Number thirteen

There were also no forks for the very first Thanksgiving. Folks didn't become a popular utensil until the 18th century, and as such, the first Thanksgiving dinner was likely consumed using spoons, knives, and hopefully washed hands. 

Number Fourteen

On the 3rd of October 1789, the first president of the United States, George Washington, declared the twenty-sixth in November 1789 as a National Day of Thanksgiving and prayer, constituting the first formal proclamation of Thanksgiving.

Number Fifteen

After Washington left office, other presidents like John Adams and James Madison also declared days of Thanksgiving. However, several early U.S. presidents actively disapproved of National Thanksgiving Day, such as Thomas Jefferson, who is thought to oppose the holiday based on the belief that such a proclamation would violate the separation of church and state. On one occasion, Jefferson condemned the idea of a federal Thanksgiving proclamation as the most ridiculous idea ever conceived.

Number Sixteen

Thanksgiving was made an official federal holiday by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, right in the middle of the American Civil War. Abe Lincoln proclaimed that on the 26th of November, the final Thursday of the month, there would be a national day of. 

Thanksgiving and praise to our benefit and father who dwelleth in the heavens. You can't prove that's not what he sounded like by the White House. Good impression. And Jefferson wasn't kidding about the whole separation of church and state. 


Number Seventeen

Lincoln was prompted to make Thanksgiving official by the actions of a magazine editor named Sarah Christopher Hale, who passionately believe that the National Day of Thanksgiving with the United Nation careering toward civil war after an incredible 17 years of campaigning and writing letters, President Lincoln finally made Thanksgiving a national holiday.

Number Eighteen

Amazingly, the woman who made Thanksgiving official has another interesting claim to fame. As Hale also wrote the popular nursery rhyme, Mary had a little lamb.

Number Nineteen

In 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt decided to change the date of Thanksgiving from the last Thursday of November to the second to last in an attempt to stimulate the economy during the Great Depression by giving more people time to shop at Christmas. 

Unfortunately, however, the change of date caused a lot of confusion. Most states held Thanksgiving on its original date, and three states Colorado, Mississippi, and Texas celebrated the holiday on both weeks.

Number Twenty

The result in public outcry caused by Roosevelt's date change was. So profound that many people mockingly referred to the Thanksgiving date as Franks giving. After only two years, the U.S. government abandoned the new policy and set the fourth Thursday, November as the legal date of Thanksgiving 

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