Posted on 11/24/2011 8:17:37 PM PST by Coleus
Yes, it was, the Latin Triditine Mass was celebrated and it beat out the Berkeley Plantation, Jamestown and Plymouth Rock by about 50 years. It seems it's not only the liberals who "revise" history. And let's face it, anyone who lives in Massachusetts knows that the growing season is over at the end of September and that's about the time the pilgrims celebrated, end of September or the beginning of October, not at the end of November like we do today. The date of the Canadian celebration of thanksgiving, Monday, Oct 10, 2011, is more accurate.
Thanks for posting. San Augustine AND Santa Fe had Thanksgiving before Plymouth.
This is true. And the event was recorded by the Chaplain. There was food sharing between the Spanish and the Indians. Because I live in la florida, I always mention this at the table every Thanksgiving Day.
What were they thankful for?
The Pilgrims were thankful for surviving a tough year of death and despair.
Actually it was the Vikings, some 500 years earlier, who celebrated the first Thanksgiving by playing the Chiefs.
Oysters, giant clams and garbanzo beans. I guess that’s one way to cut down on the number of family members coming over to celebrate Thanksgiving.
LOL!
US history is often seen through a British lens. Non-Brits are only seen as threats/outsiders before 1776.
Where did they come up with the “giant clams” thing? St. Augustine clams are good but just sort of average.
I wonder how you say "pull my finger" in Spanish.
Sorry—not a Triditine Mass strictly speaking, as the Missal wasn’t published yet—1570—and Pius V was still about five months away from the Papacy.
“...garbanzo beans, olive oil, bread, pork and wine.”
Now, you know the natives had never eaten ANY of these things before.
I imagine their digestive systems went into shock, with predictable results.
After nearly running out of food and water while crossing the Chihuahua Desert, the Spaniards stumbled upon the Rio Grande. Here, they celebrated their good fortune by holding a Thanksgiving feast consisting of fish from the river, ducks and other game--but apparently no turkeys. Oñate and his party would go on to colonize New Mexico.
Sorry—God was thanked many times on this continent before 1621, but there’s really no doubt about it. The annual holiday of American Thanksgiving derives from the New England tradition that started in Plymouth Colony. President Washington nationalized the regional holiday in 1789.
The Catholic Church strongly supports American Thanksgiving, in spite of its Protestant origin, because she (like Christ her spouse) supports all good things, no matter who does them.
Actually the first Thanksgiving in North America was some miles away, in THE YEAR BEFORE the Spanish settled St. Augustine.
In 1564 a group of French Protestants known as Huguenots settled in Spanish-claimed territory near present-day Jacksonville. They built Fort Caroline on the St. John’s River in Florida, in present-day Jacksonville.
On June 30, 1564, they set a day of Thanksgiving and offered the first Protestant prayer in North America:
“We sang a psalm of Thanksgiving unto God, beseeching Him that it would please Him to continue His accustomed goodness towards us.”
Three small ships carrying 300 Frenchmen led by Rene de Laudonniere anchored in the river known today as the St. Johns. . . On June 30, 1564, construction of a triangular-shaped fort . . . was begun with the help of a local tribe of Timucuan Indians . . . (Fort Caroline was) home for this hardy group of Huguenots . . . their strong religious motivations inspired them.
When the king of Spain discovered this encroachment on what he considered his property, he dispatched an army under Don Pedro Menéndez to drive out the French and to establish a Spanish colony in La Florida. This was the beginning of St. Augustine.
After coming ashore and having his Thanksgiving Mass that you mentioned, Don Pedro Menéndez actually did drive out the French Protestants, murdering most of them in the process....
After taking Fort Caroline in a bloody battle, Menéndez found 111 French Protestant men away from the Fort, and forced them to surrender, which they did.
When they refused to convert to Roman Catholicism Capt. Menéndez murdered all 111 of the disarmed Protestants.
This was the first (and one of the only, that I know of) religious massacres in America—of those who did celebrate the 1st Thanksgiving.
One may want to review the whole history of something before boasting...
Whoops, my numbers were off. First 111 were executed...for refusing to convert to Roman Catholicism.
Then a couple weeks later, another 134 French Huguenots were captured...and then slaughtered by the Spanish, for the same reason...
The inlet and area there is now still named, “Matanzas” which apparently in Spanish means, “Slaughters.”
I was wondering when Fort Caroline would enter the discussion.
Well if you want to brag about Roman Catholic Menéndez supposedly having the “1st Thanksgiving” you have to deal with the very reason he came in the first place: To kill French Protestants.
I’ve read about it, it was obscene, the slaughter.
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