Around the time the Pilgrims came to America in 1620, it was common in England and many parts of Europe to frequently set aside days for giving thanks to God. In the New World, where life was harsh in the beginning, there were numerous opportunities to hold such days of thanks, such as any time a particularly good crop would come in, when drought would end, when a particularly harsh winter was survived, when a group repelled an attack by Native Americans, when a supply ship arrived safely from Europe, etc. Seems like they had many reasons to party.
These celebrations remained fairly common up until the time when Thanksgiving became a national holiday. Most of these celebrations bore little resemblance to what we think of as Thanksgiving. The Pilgrims celebrations bore little resemblance to what is depicted now.
No one knows for sure who actually celebrated the first actual Thanksgiving in America. The most popular examples often referenced as the actual “firsts” include:
- The day of thanksgiving celebrated in September 1565 by a
group of Spaniards lead by Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de
Avilé, in Saint Augustine, Florida. Pedro invited the Timucua
tribe to dine with them on that Thanksgiving.
- The group led by Spanish explorer Juan de Onate in 1598 in San
Elizario, Texas held a Thanksgiving festival after successfully
crossing 350 miles of Mexican desert.
- The thirty-eight settlers who landed on James River by
Jamestown in December 1619. Their charter required that the day
of landing be set aside as a day of thanksgiving both on that
first date and every year after.
- The Pilgrim’s Thanksgiving that took place sometime between September and October of 1621.