Scanning Around With Gene: A Thanksgiving Day Parade of Images

Perhaps more a meal than a real holiday, Thanksgiving is a unique American tradition. And now we all get to sit at the adult table!
Written by Gene Gable on November 25, 2008

Why are the Pilgrims’ pants always falling down? Because they wear their belt buckles on their hats.

That’s the only Thanksgiving joke I know, unless you count the holiday itself, which I’ve always felt is one of the less weighty celebrations. Yes, we give thanks for the bounty we enjoy, but we also use the long weekend to gear up for the winter holidays and get together with relatives we often don’t care for to eat a meal we’ve often grown tired of.

But as a pure slice of Americana, Thanksgiving is tops. Here is a 1932 conception of the first Thanksgiving by J.L.G. Ferris, followed by several drawings of the Pilgrims’ landing at Plymouth in 1620.

Click on any image to see a larger version.

At its core, Thanksgiving is the American version of a harvest celebration, which is a time-honored tradition among many cultures. We round up the last of the fall vegetables and other foods, decorate with things that are yellow and orange, and eat a lot. Here is a 1885 cartoon showing the ghost of turkey past by Oliver Herford, and a 1907 William Allen Rogers cartoon showing lambs celebrating Thanksgiving.

But we put our own spin on the classic harvest celebration with our emphasis on the meal and the tradition of featuring turkey and other staples that are native to America. Here is a stereoscopic picture of the classic Thanksgiving table in 1923, a 1869 Thomas Nast cartoon from Harper’s Weekly titled “Uncle Sam’s Thanksgiving Dinner,” a 1912 lithograph from Puck magazine of a Thanksgiving “scene” in old Plymouth colony, and another Puck cover illustration from 1897 (which references political corruption in New York).

As is typical of American holidays, the celebration of Thanksgiving has moved around quite a bit. It was not until a Federal law in 1941 that Thanksgiving was officially set as being the fourth Thursday in November. But presidents have always gotten in on the act. Here from 1921 are two pictures of Presidential turkeys arriving at the White House, and a 1929 picture of the Presidential turkey entourage.

The precise origins of many of the traditions we celebrate have been obscured over the decades, and a concerted effort was made after the Civil War to standardize some practices to help unify the country. But clearly the focus on the turkey was widely popular. Here from 1919 are two pictures of people bringing home turkeys, followed by a 1912 image of turkey-raffle winners bringing home the goods, and finally a 1900 picture of a woman dressing a turkey in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

One practice we’ve lost is that of Thanksgiving “masking.” Before Halloween became its own widely celebrated holiday, kids dressed up on Thanksgiving and went door-to-door in search of apples and other harvest goodies. Here are a series of pictures from 1911 showing Thanksgiving maskers and the practice of scrambling for pennies thrown to them.

Family gatherings are central to Thanksgivings past and present. Here is an early depiction of the bad manners sometimes displayed at Thanksgiving, first from 1896 by Alice Stephens, followed by a 1901 Collier’s magazine cover illustration by Edward Penfield, a 1895 Art Nouveau drawing by Will Bradley, and a Harper’s Bazaar cover of the same era.

Go to page 2 for the editor's favorite Thanksgiving photographs.

1

The step-child of the holidays

Thanks Gene for this somewhat tongue-in-cheek look at Thanksgivings past and present. It's certainly a good thing that "Thanksgiving" was written on one of the pictures of the maskers, and that there was a note about the pennies as well --otherwise the ever-growing Halloween monster would have surely consumed them both.

Being an expat American, now in Japan but until recently in Austria, I am amazed by the rapid global spread of Halloween. Of course every culture is adapting it in its own way (predictably, the cutesy elements are emphasized in Japan, while in Austria the festivities take on a more 'harvest fest' feel) but the unabashed Americanness of it all certainly makes a lot of older and more straight-laced folks feel a bit queasy.

Thanksgiving, as you correctly point out, continues to be the only truly American holiday just for Americans. With all of its homely aspects -- and the fact that the Pilgrims were likely a pretty grim lot -- I do rather wish the holiday wasn't quite as squeezed out of the public consciousness by the twin Juggernauts of the year end. But it is a futile wish.

2

the holidays

Thanksgiving, as you correctly point out, continues to be the only truly American holiday just for Americans. With all of its homely sohbet aspects -- and the fact that the Pilgrims were likely a pretty grim lot -- I do rather wish the holiday wasn't quite as squeezed out of the public consciousness by the twin Juggernauts of the year end. But it is a futile wish.

3

Thanksgiving

I think that we should all be thankful for our families. I battled a drug addiction for years and lost touch with my family. After going through Narconon drug rehab, I finally have my life and family back. That is what I am thankful of this Thanksgiving.

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