| Thanksgiving’s Irish Twist
By John Cusack
In
1621, the pilgrims, just arrived in the New World, had no idea how wild
their new frontier could be. Winter arrived and with it came starvation,
death, and the idea that maybe it was time to give up and go back to Europe
where the strict confines of politics were easier to deal with than
the utter randomness of Mother Nature.
The real story of what happened next is all but lost.
On February 20 of that same year, a ship called The Lyon arrived and delivered
much needed provisions which helped sustain the humble colony. The ship
was sent over by a Dublin merchant whose daughter was married to one of
the pilgrims.
Grateful for their salvation, the pilgrims dubbed the following day, February
21, a Day of Thanksgiving.
Over 200 years later, President Lincoln decreed the day a national holiday
and moved it to the fourth Thursday of November. The pilgrims’ amiable
relationship with the Native Americans became the focus of the holiday,
and the true origin of the first Thanksgiving remained misconstrued
for the next 75 years.
In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved Thanksgiving back a few
weeks because of its proximity to Christmas. He thought that providing
more time between holidays would help merchants.
The move proved very unpopular with the general public and one year later
the date was again changed back to the fourth Thursday in November. Amidst
the brief change, however, the origin of Thanksgiving was studied to validate
the original date.
The Boston Post, the largest paper in New England at the time, took
up the story in “The Observant Citizen,” a section of the
paper which discussed a wide range of topics. An unsigned article appeared
in this section which mentioned The Lyon as the ship responsible for the
first Thanksgiving, but the writer claimed that the ship had come
from England or Holland.
Irish organizations in Boston were outraged and cited anti-Irish bias
as the reason for the paper’s failure to mention Dublin as the true
port of origin.
The writer of the article later acknowledged that he had made a mistake
and promised to make a correction in the paper the following Thanksgiving.
The correction was never made. Time quelled the public outcry, and the
true origin of the first Thanksgiving is all but forgotten.
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