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To: Bacon Man; Hap
Ping 'cause you'll need a recipe to go with that brand-new fryer! Fryer! Fryer! FRYER!


27 posted on 11/22/2004 8:33:59 AM PST by Xenalyte (And then I says, "Tell me I'm wrong!" and he says, "I can't, baby, 'cause you're NOT!")
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To: Xenalyte; everyone

During the Civil War, governors had not hesitated to use their Thanksgiving proclamations to show their advocacy for the Union or the Confederacy. Illinois Governor Richard Yates' 1864 proclamation stated:

”Let us praise Him that He has crowned our armies with victory, and pray our Heavenly Father that He will shield our soldiers in all their perils, lighten their sufferings on the march, in hospital and in battle – and console the hearts of their bereaved families at home – and that He may deliver our country from her enemies, and so direct the administration of our national affairs as to give all the blessings of permanent prosperity and lasting peace to our nation.”

It is no surprise that, after the war ended, a divided country found no unity in the new national holiday.

Perceived – and now hated - as a “Yankee holiday,” Thanksgiving provoked strong feelings of resentment among many southerners. The Presidential Thanksgiving Proclamation issued by Andrew Johnson in 1868 expressed a wistful and modest wish:
“We are permitted to hope that long-protracted political and sectional dissensions are at no distant day to give place to returning harmony and fraternal affection throughout the Republic.”

It took many years to restore harmony and fraternal affection. Thanksgiving only gradually regained its popularity in the South. The original prewar national recognition of the Thanksgiving holiday was largely due to the influence of Sarah Josepha Hale and her widely-read Godey’s Lady’s Book. Domestic magazines, which proliferated greatly in the 1870s and 1880s, played a similar role after the Civil War. Often published in the Northeast and fond of featuring Thanksgiving menus and decorations as a theme for November, these new "lady's magazines" gradually softened the feelings of Southern women.


28 posted on 11/22/2004 9:05:18 AM PST by lodwick (The 2nd Amendment is Our Reset Button on Governments.)
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To: Xenalyte; All

That was funny!

Hi everyone -- I'm back home now (from Afghanistan). I'm happy to be home in time for the holidays and happy to have more FR time and catch up here on the Guild.

I read Martha's Thanksgiving message from prison. Her life sounds similar to deployment except for the better environment and she gets to have visits from friends - plus its only five months she has to be there. LOL!

Cheers, CC :)


96 posted on 11/24/2004 3:57:53 AM PST by CheneyChick
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