http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1285981/posts?page=1
This annual mythology about Plymouth Colony keep omitting that Thanksgiving was first celebrated at Berkeley Plantation December 4, 1619 on the James River in Virginia.
http://www.jamesriverplantations.org/Berkeley.html
And of course, both Anglo inspired Thanksgivings take a back seat to the Spanish at St. Augustine in Florida in 1565:
http://scrippsnews.com/content/was-first-thanksgiving-florida
Clams, garbanzo beans, and olive oil. Who is serving that tomorrow?
The first Thanksgiving was celebrated long before the Pilgrims arrived. Don Juan de Onate led settlers from Mexico into what is now New Mexico. On April 30, 1598, the scouts in the colonists’ party made camp along the Rio Grande and prepared to drink and eat their fill, for there they found fishes and waterfowl. Villagrá wrote,
“We built a great bonfire and roasted meat and fish, and then sat down to a repast the like of which we had never enjoyed before.” Before this bountiful meal, Don Juan de Oñate personally nailed a cross to a living tree and prayed, “Open the door to these heathens, establish the church altars where the body and blood of the Son of God may be offered, open to us the way to security and peace for their preservation and ours, and give to our king and to me in his royal name, peaceful possession of these kingdoms and provinces for His blessed glory. Amen.”