Posted on 11/25/2015 5:30:11 PM PST by SeekAndFind
As an alternative to the ubiquitous countdown to Black Friday, each weekday between now and Thanksgiving I will be posting brief essays on the history of the First Thanksgiving and its place in American memory. In my last post, I introduced you to a now long-forgotten work of fiction from the 1880s that invented much of what we think we "know" about the First Thanksgiving. In today's post I begin a two-part review of arguably the most popular modern-day recreation of that event.
In what I can only attribute to God's sense of humor, the month after IVP released my book The First Thanksgiving: What the Real Story Tells Us about Loving God and Learning from History, Rush Limbaugh came out with a book on the same topic. The book Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims follows a middle-school history teacher named Rush Revere who, with the aid of a time-traveling, talking horse named Liberty, goes back to visit the Pilgrims in 1621 and discovers that they all would have voted Republican and opposed Obamacare. The book was (and is) fabulously successful, and Limbaugh has followed it with three more that carry Rush and Liberty up through the War of 1812.
My fear is that some Christian readers will assume that the series offers a reliable window into the American past solely because they agree with the author's political reading of the American present. If you happen to fall into that category, may I appeal to you to reconsider?
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Historical evidence, for most of us, is sort of like the foundation of a house. I remember when my wife and I were ready to buy our first home. In the back of my mind, I knew that the structure needed to rest on a firm foundation, but I didn't waste much time thinking about it. I was a lot more concerned about floor plans and color schemes and square footage, and I remember being irritated when someone suggested that I should look underneath our dream home before buying it. ("You want me to crawl where?") I think we tend to shop for history in much the same way. If a particular history book reinforces convictions that we already hold, it rarely enters our mind to investigate the underlying evidence. No need to go down in the crawl space when the rest of the house is so appealing.
When it comes to the use of evidence, Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims is a train wreck. I don't say this gleefully, or with a sneer of condescension. Indeed, I say this as a political conservative who shares the author's appreciation for the wisdom of our founders. I just wish he hadn't botched the job so badly. The book may be entertaining--it may even inspire some young readers to want to learn more about their national heritage--but it fundamentally misrepresents the "Brave Pilgrims" it purports to honor.
As Christian historian Beth Schweiger puts it so eloquently, "in history, the call to love one's neighbor is extended to the dead." The figures we study from the past were image bearers like us. They had their own way of looking at life--their own hopes, dreams, values, and aspirations--and when we ignore the complexity of their world to further neat-and-tidy answers in our own, we treat them as cardboard props rather than dealing with them seriously as human beings. Put simply, we are not loving them but using them. Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims does this in spades. I could offer numerous examples of what I have in mind, but for now I'll just concentrate on one: Limbaugh's characterization of the Pilgrim's economic values.
First, some background. Four centuries ago, the proposal to relocate a hundred people across an ocean to an uncharted continent was almost recklessly audacious. It was also prohibitively expensive, and most of the Leiden Separatists who were committed to the venture were also as poor as church mice. To succeed, it was imperative that they find financial backers who would bankroll the undertaking, and the company of London merchants who agreed to do so were no philanthropists. They were hard-headed businessmen who drove a hard bargain. And so, in exchange for the considerable cost of transporting the Pilgrims to North America and supplying them until they could provide for themselves, the Pilgrims agreed to work for the London financiers for seven years. During that time, under the terms of their agreement, everything they produced and everything they constructed (even including the houses they slept in) would belong to the company, not to them individually. At the end of the seven years, any revenue that had been generated in excess of their debts was to be divided among the London investors and the Pilgrim settlers.
Next comes a crucial plot twist: According to governor William Bradford's history Of Plymouth Plantation, in the spring of 1623 the surviving Pilgrim colonists began to debate among themselves whether there was anything they could do to improve the next year's crop. The answer, after considerable debate, was to allocate to every household a small quantity of land (initially, one acre per person) to cultivate as their own during the coming season. Because the land varied considerably in quality, the plots were assigned by lot, with the understanding that there would be a drawing the next year and the next after that, etc., so that the land each family was assigned would change annually.
While under the old scheme individual workers had minimal incentive to put forth extra effort (since the fruit of that effort would be divided among all, including the slackers), the new plan, according to Bradford, "made all hands very industrious." The only flaw was the decision to reallocate household plots annually, for this discouraged families from making long-term improvements to their assigned tracts. To rectify that, in the spring of 1624 the Pilgrims decided to make the allocations permanent. The success of the new plan, Bradford recalled, demonstrated "the vanity of that conceit of Plato's and other ancients applauded by some of later times; that the taking away of property and bringing in community into a commonwealth would make them happy and flourishing; as if they were wiser than God."
This shift in economic organization looms large in how Limbaugh remembers the Pilgrims' story, and he has been struck by it for at least two decades. I can say this with confidence because the talk show host also paid attention to the Pilgrims in his 1993 polemic See, I Told You So. In a chapter tellingly titled "Dead White Guys or What Your History Books Never Told You," Limbaugh explained how "long before Karl Marx was even born" the Pilgrims had experimented with socialism and it hadn't worked! "So what did Bradford's community try next?" Limbaugh asks. "They unharnessed the power of good old free enterprise by invoking the undergirding capitalistic principle of private property." And what was the result? "In no time the Pilgrims . . . had more food than they could eat themselves." They began trading their surplus with the surrounding Indians, and "the profits allowed them to pay off their debts to the merchants in London." In sum, the free market had triumphed.
See, I Told You So never refers to the first Thanksgiving, but twenty years later, in Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims, Limbaugh claimed that the Pilgrims' celebration would never have occurred had they not abandoned their socialistic experiment. As a literary device, Limbaugh has Rush Revere and his talking horse, Liberty, time-travel repeatedly between the present and the winter of 1620-1621. (They are accompanied by two of Revere's middle-school students--a trouble-making boy named Tommy and a Native American girl named Freedom.) In late December 1620, the time travelers pay a visit to the Pilgrims shortly after their arrival in New England and are surprised to learn that they plan on holding all property in common. "We are trying to create a fair and equal society," William Bradford explains to them. "But is that freedom?" Rush Revere muses to himself.
They return three months later, in March 1621, and are discouraged to see that the settlement is not prospering. William Bradford is perplexed; he had thought that centralized economic controls "should guarantee our prosperity and success. . . . But recently I'm beginning to doubt whether everyone will work their hardest on something that is not their own." At this point, young Tommy relates to Bradford how hard his mother works to win prizes at the county fair, prompting the Pilgrim governor to speculate whether giving each family their own plot of land might motivate the Pilgrims to work harder and be more creative. In an epiphany, Bradford realizes that "a little competition could be healthy!" "Brilliant!" Rush Revere responds. The rest, as they say, is history.
When the time travelers return that autumnâhaving received a personal invitation to the "First Annual Plimoth Plantation Harvest Festival"âeverything is changed. "Everyone seems so joyous," Rush Revere observes, "far different than a short while ago." Governor Bradford explains that "we all have so much to be grateful for." The turning point "came when every family was assigned its own plot of land to work." Underscoring the point, the Pilgrims' Native American friend, Squanto, explains, "William is a smart man. . . . He gave people their own land. He made people free." Not only that, Bradford adds, but the profits they are now generating will "soon allow us to pay back the people that sponsored our voyage to America." Yes, there was a great deal to be thankful for. But as Rush Revere notes as the time travelers are preparing to leave, "It was obvious that this first Thanksgiving wouldn't be possible if William Bradford hadn't boldly changed the way the Pilgrims worked and lived."
The history lesson in Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims is clear: The Pilgrims' First Thanksgiving had nothing to do with the Lord's granting of a bounteous harvest after a cruel and heart-wrenching winter. Instead, they celebrated because God had delivered them from the futility of socialism. As Limbaugh put it two decades ago, "Can you think of a more important lesson one could derive from the Pilgrim experience?"
There is just one problem: IT’S NOT TRUE. Oh, the Pilgrims undoubtedly moved toward the private ownership of property, but they did so in 1624, according to William Bradford, three crop years AFTER their autumn celebration in 1621. To make the movement toward private property the necessary precondition for the First Thanksgiving is, historically speaking, a real whopper. To use a pejorative label that the radio personality is fond of wielding, this is revisionist history with a vengeance!
But there is more amiss here than a chronological gaffe. When the Pilgrims did move toward the private ownership of property, the shift was not quite the unbridled endorsement of free market competition that Limbaugh would have us believe. Nearly two centuries ago, the brilliant conservative Alexis de Tocqueville observed that "a false but clear and precise idea always has more power in the world than one which is true but complex." Limbaugh's characterization of the Pilgrims' economic shift is clear, precise . . . and false. The reality is complex.
On a visit to Plymouth at the very end of 1621, deacon Robert Cushman (a church official in the Leiden congregation) was invited to preach to the Pilgrims and chose for his text I Corinthians 10:24: "Let no man seek his own: but every man another's wealth." The decision to allow each household to work its own individual plot represented a movement away from this ideal--but only partially. Both Bradford and his assistant Edward Winslow described the shift not as a good thing, in and of itself, but as a concession to human weakness. It was an acknowledgment, in Winslow's words, of "that self-love wherewith every man, in a measure more or less, loveth and preferreth his own good before his neighbor's." Because "all men have this corruption in them," as Bradford put it, it was prudent to take this aspect of human nature into account.
This was still a century and a half, however, before Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations would celebrate the enlightened pursuit of self-interest as the surest way to promote the general welfare. In countless ways, the Pilgrims showed that they still belonged to an earlier age. In economics, as in all of life, they viewed liberty as the freedom to do unto others only as they would be done by. The golden rule meant that there were numerous instances in which producers must deny themselves rather than seek to maximize profit, and if they were unwilling to police their behavior voluntarily, the colony's legislature was willing to coerce them.
Examples abound. The Laws of the Colony of New Plymouth reveal that producers were prohibited from selling to distant customers if doing so created a shortage among their neighbors. Under the laws of Plymouth, it was illegal to export finished lumber under any conditions, and farmers could only sell scarce foodstuffs (corn, peas, and beans) outside of the colony with the express permission of the colonial government. Similarly, one of the very first laws recorded in Plymouth's records prohibited skilled craftsmen from working for "foreigners or strangers till such time as the necessity of the colony be served."
Nor was it acceptable to gouge their neighbors by selling products or services for more than they were intrinsically worth. The colonial government passed laws regulating the price that millers charged, the fares ferrymen imposed, the wage rate of daily laborers, and the ever-important price of beer. Pilgrim Stephen Hopkins ran afoul of the latter, and was called before a grand jury for selling one-penny beer at twice the going rate. A few years later, a colonist named John Barnes was charged with buying grain at four shillings a bushel which he then sold at five, "without adventure or long forbearance." He had not assumed a significant risk in the transaction, in other words, nor held the grain for a considerable period of time, and under the circumstances he had no right to a 25 percent profit, even if a buyer was willing to meet his price. In sum, there was nothing intrinsically moral about what the market would bear.
And what of Limbaugh's claim that the Pilgrims' shift toward free enterprise would enable them "soon" to repay the company that had sponsored them? This assertion, at least, is correct, if by "soon" Limbaugh meant twenty-eight years, which, according to William Bradford is how long it took the Pilgrims to erase their debts. In truth, the assertion is misleading in the extreme.
So where does this leave us? Before anyone concludes that I am a closet communist, I will say again that I am politically conservative. What is more, the fact that Limbaugh is badly in error about the Pilgrims does not, in itself, discredit his economic views. We don't automatically have to follow the Pilgrims' lead in this or any other area of life; God has granted them no authority over us. They didn't celebrate Christmas, wear jewelry, or believe in church weddings, and I have no qualms whatsoever in choosing not to follow their example in such matters.
But I do feel compelled to call Limbaugh to account for such an egregious misrepresentation. As a historian, I think no good cause is ever served by distorting the past, whether intentionally or accidentally. And as a Christian historian, I am grieved that the Pilgrims' timeless example of perseverance and heavenly hope amidst unspeakable hardship has been obscured, their faith in God overshadowed by their purported faith in the free market.
But here's the real story, and even today I shared with you a story from the Huffington Post, which totally mischaracterizes the first Thanksgiving. In fact, let me find -- if I put that in the right Stack where I could get to it quickly -- the way they treated it, because... Here it is. When the Mayflower pilgrims landed in New England in the early 17th century, they established a harvest celebration that would later become known as Thanksgiving by sitting down with Native Americans gracious enough to share their land and way of life. And, well, we all know how that turned out." The Pilgrims eventually killed the Indians, conquered their land, and took everything from them.
That's the modern multicultural way Thanksgiving is taught.
Native Americans were here minding their own business; the Pilgrims showed up. They were incapable, they were incompetent of feeding themselves. They didn't have any hotels; there weren't any houses. They couldn't have gotten by if not the Indians, and the Indians shared everything with them and in gratitude the Pilgrims wiped 'em out. That is so far from the truth of Thanksgiving that it's more than a shame. "The story of the Pilgrims begins in the early part of the seventeenth century... The Church of England under King James I was persecuting anyone and everyone who did not recognize its absolute civil and spiritual authority.
"Those who challenged ecclesiastical authority and those who believed strongly in freedom of worship were hunted down, imprisoned, and sometimes executed for their beliefs. A group of separatists first fled to Holland and established a community. After eleven years, about forty of them agreed to make a perilous journey to the New World," across the Atlantic Ocean, "where they would certainly face hardships, but could live and worship God according to the dictates of their own consciences.
"On August 1, 1620, the Mayflower set sail. It carried a total of 102 passengers, including forty Pilgrims led by William Bradford. On the journey, Bradford set up an agreement, a contract, that established just and equal laws for all members of the new community, irrespective of their religious beliefs. Where did the revolutionary ideas expressed in the Mayflower Compact come from? From the Bible. The Pilgrims were a people completely steeped in the lessons of the Old and New Testaments," the Bible. The Pilgrims were religious, and they came here to establish freedom of religion; they fled across an entire ocean to escape religious persecution.
"They looked to the ancient Israelites for their example. And, because of the biblical precedents set forth in Scripture, they never doubted that their experiment would work. But this was no pleasure cruise, friends. The journey to the New World was a long and arduous one. And when the Pilgrims landed in New England in November, they found, according to Bradford's detailed journal, a cold, barren, desolate wilderness. There were no friends to greet them, he wrote. There were no houses to shelter them. There were no inns where they could refresh themselves. And the sacrifice they had made for freedom was just beginning.
"During the first winter, half the Pilgrims -- including Bradford's own wife -- died of either starvation, sickness or exposure." Many of them lived on the Mayflower while houses and shelter were being built. "When spring finally came, Indians taught the settlers how to plant corn, fish for cod and skin beavers for coats. Life improved for the Pilgrims, but" even with all this "they did not yet prosper! This is important to understand because this is where modern American history lessons often end.
"Thanksgiving is actually explained in some textbooks as a holiday for which the Pilgrims gave thanks to the Indians for saving their lives, rather than as a devout expression of gratitude grounded in the tradition of both the Old and New Testaments." The Bible. The original Thanksgiving was a thanks to God. It was not a thanks to the Indians. This is not to disparage the Indians or the Native Americans. The Pilgrims did not. But it was not a thanks to the Indians for saving the Pilgrims. The Pilgrims thanked God. But it's more detailed than this.
"Here is the part that has been omitted." Here's the part that the Huffing and Puffington Post either doesn't know or omitted today. "The original contract the Pilgrims had entered into with their merchant-sponsors..." They didn't have the money to do this. They were beholden to the people who funded them, and they entered into contracts with these "merchant-sponsors in London [that] called for everything they produced to go into a common store, and each member of the community was entitled to one common share.
"All of the land they cleared and the houses they built belong to the community as well. They were going to distribute it equally." Everybody was going to get an equal share of what everybody combined produced. "All of the land they cleared and the houses they built belonged to the community as well. Nobody owned anything. They just had a share in it. It was a commune, folks." And it was this way by contract, by design. It was the forerunner to the communes we saw in the '60s and '70s out in California -- and it was complete with organic vegetables, by the way."
They could grow no other than organic. "Bradford, who had become the new governor of the colony, recognized that this form of collectivism was as costly and destructive to the Pilgrims as that first harsh winter, which had taken so many lives." It just wasn't working. There wasn't any prosperity. From his own journal, "He decided to take bold action. Bradford assigned a plot of land to each family to work and manage," and whatever they produced was theirs. The overages they could sell or share or do whatever they wanted with. But what happened essentially was that Bradford was "thus turning loose the power of the marketplace."
If you're saying it to yourself, you're right. The Pilgrims had discovered and experimented with what could only be described as socialism, and it fails. It did not work. "What Bradford and his community found was that the most creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any harder than anyone else, unless they could utilize the power of personal motivation!" If everybody got the same no matter what the end result was and if everybody got the same no matter how hard they worked, they were all essentially members of a union, and all socialized.
"But while most of the rest of the world has been experimenting with socialism for well over a hundred years -- trying to refine it, perfect it, and re-invent it -- the Pilgrims decided early on," it didn't take them long to realize it didn't work and "to scrap it permanently." You're not taught this! Nobody is taught this. Even today in the true story of Thanksgiving, it was an epic failure of socialism. "What Bradford wrote about this social experiment should be in every schoolchild's history lesson. If it were, we might prevent much needless suffering in the future."
Remember, this book is written 23 years ago, or maybe 24 years ago. It's 1992.
This is Bradford writing: "'The experience that we had in this common course and condition, tried sundry years...that by taking away property, and bringing community into a common wealth, would make them happy and flourishing -- as if they were wiser than God,' Bradford wrote. 'For this community [so far as it was] was found to breed much confusion and discontent, and retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort. For young men that were most able and fit for labor and service did repine that they should spend their time and strength to work for other men's wives and children without any recompense," without being paid for it, "that was thought injustice.'
Why should you work for other people when you can't work for yourself? What's the point? Bradford was saying, "It's not working here. There's no personal incentive," and there were sloths. Not all these people were cream of the crop. Some of them sat around, didn't do anything while others did everything. "The Pilgrims found that people could not be expected to do their best work without incentive. So what did Bradford's community try next?" Free enterprise. "They unharnessed the power of good old free enterprise by invoking the undergirding capitalistic principle of private property.
"Every family was assigned its own plot of land to work and permitted to market its own crops and products," sell whatever overages they had. "And what was the result? 'This had very good success,' wrote Bradford [in his journal], 'for it made all hands industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been.'" It's an amazing story what happened. "In no time, the Pilgrims found they had more food than they could eat themselves." This is where it gets really good, folks. If you're laboring under the misconception that I was, that I was taught in school. "So they set up trading posts and exchanged goods with the Indians."
They produced what they needed for themselves and they started doing business with the Indians. They "exchanged goods. The profits allowed them to pay off their debts to the merchants in London. And the success and prosperity of the Plymouth settlement attracted more Europeans and began what came to be known as the 'Great Puritan Migration.'" It was a rousing economic success after an attempt to establish themselves under socialism. It was not the name they knew. They used "commune," "communal," and so forth. But it did not work. And they had such great success that it began a migration of others who heard about it and wanted in on the action.
And the first Thanksgiving was the Pilgrims indeed getting together with the Indians, with whom they were trading. There's no question the Indians assisted them when they landed, but it's not true that the Pilgrims then took advantage of 'em, conquered them, killed them, and took their land. They ended up trading with them. All of this, this whole story is written about in a way that eight to 10-year-olds understand it and are taken right to it in the first Rush Revere book: Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims. I was never taught this. I didn't know it, until I started researching that book back 1992. That was the first I had heard of why the Pilgrims were really thankful. It was thanks to God. It was the virtue of gratitude, which is all through George Washington's inaugural Thanksgiving address.
END TRANSCRIPT
The articles points were bloviated. Basically, Rush was right.
Who was Hoe?
RE: Who was Hoe?
I have already asked the moderator to correct the typo in the title.
The original title was ALL CAPS. I re-typed it but mis-typed “How” to “Hoe”.
In the meantime, I would request every poster to please comment on the CONTENTS of the article instead of the typo.
To err is human... and all that :)
Just keeping you on your toes. Happy Thanksgiving.
Hoe dem Pilgrims Yo !!!
Please folks, cut the wise cracks.
I don’t want this thread to degenerate into posts form the typo police.
Please focus on the CONTENTS of the article. I’ll have a happier thanksgiving that way.
RE: Just keeping you on your toes. Happy Thanksgiving.
The typo has been corrected. Now, can we focus on the article itself please?
Here’s the paragraph that I disagree with :
________________________________
“Both Bradford and his assistant Edward Winslow described the shift not as a good thing, in and of itself, but as a concession to human weakness. It was an acknowledgment, in Winslow’s words, of “that self-love wherewith every man, in a measure more or less, loveth and preferreth his own good before his neighbor’s.” Because “all men have this corruption in them,” as Bradford put it”
______________________________
I fail to see how Rush Limbaugh’s essay contradicts the above. I am sure you agree that HUMAN WEAKNESS is real as we are all sinful and we all fall short of God’s glory. William Bradford just made that observation by his own account.
If men loved each other unconditionally and perfectly as God command all to do, yes, I will agree with you. If this were true, We would all work as best as we can and be productive as best as we can for the good of the community instead of just ourselves and own family.
However, it is NOT true that men ( even the Pilgrims meet that standard ).
So this is not the case in reality. Hence, capitalism and free enterprise are EXACTLY what was needed because of this observation.
No worries, just having a little fun.
I’ll read the two articles later and post a comment.
Agreed.
I have it on good authority that Rush was not really there when the Pilgrims were there, despite the claim in his book.
“bloviated”
Perhaps the most accurate and on point use of the term I have seen. Perfect description.
Even more telling, the Jamestown colony, in 1611-12, had the same exact experience with socialism and the conversion to a freer economic system. NO ONE (including Rush) claims there was "capitalism" at this time, only that land ownership and grain stores were privatized.
I read Bradford’s work recently. He admitted that their socialist-type experiment had not worked. I got the general impression that Bradford would have liked for it to, because in his mind it would have brought them closer to his perception of the practices of early Christians, but he accepted the failure as God’s will.
Hoes are useful for planting corn.
I read the tripe you posted, and judged the contents of this article as useless excrement!
I have not pursued any official designation to certify my “tribal status”.
It could not be disputed, if I ever did, but what would be the point?
For anyone who earnestly yearns to suffer for the “sins of their forefathers”...please just consign yourselves straight to hell, and leave the rest of us alone!
My maternal line Sioux great-grandmother did not escape the controls of the hellish “reservation” for YOUR benefit.
And her great, great grandchild is so NOT politically correct!
I’m afraid that yours is not a helpful comment and it does not address the points of the author at all. Sorry to say.
Perhaps you should seek another venue for your endeavors?
No comment I make will ever be considered “helpful” to your point, in your opinion, or in mine.
That opinion is correct, since I think you are an idiot, and I have no desire to be “helpful” to spreading your inane opinions, unchecked.
But it’s always useful to out “concern trolls”.
We posters here are not nearly as stupid as you appear to think we are...
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