Thanksgiving

Checking it Out

Veteran
Apr 3, 2003
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I Introduction

Thanksgiving Day, legal holiday observed annually in the United States on the fourth Thursday of November. In Canada, Thanksgiving falls on the second Monday in October. Most people celebrate Thanksgiving by gathering with family or friends for a holiday feast. Thanksgiving was first celebrated by Pilgrims and Native Americans in colonial New England in the early 17th century. Its actual origin, however, probably traces to harvest festivals that have been traditional in many parts of the world since ancient times(see Festivals and Feasts). Today Thanksgiving is mainly a celebration of domestic life, centered on the home and family.

II Customs and Symbols

Public observances of Thanksgiving usually emphasize the holiday’s connection with the Pilgrims. Thanksgiving pageants and parades often feature children dressed in Pilgrim costume, complete with bonnets or tall hats, dark clothes, and shoes with large silver-colored buckles.

Many of the images commonly associated with Thanksgiving are derived from much older traditions of celebrating the autumn harvest. For example, the cornucopia (a horn-shaped basket overflowing with fruits and vegetables) is a typical emblem of Thanksgiving abundance that dates to ancient harvest festivals. Many communities also decorate their churches with fruits, flowers, and vegetables at Thanksgiving, much as European communities have for centuries during the autumn harvest season.

In keeping with the idea of celebrating a plentiful harvest, preparing and eating a large meal is a central part of most Thanksgiving celebrations. Thanksgiving menus usually include turkey, bread-crumb stuffing, cranberry sauce, squash, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, and pumpkin pie. These simple foods recall the rustic virtues of the Pilgrims. Additionally, most of these foods are native to North America, emphasizing the natural bounty that greeted early settlers in their adopted homeland. Later groups of immigrants to North America often adapted the traditional holiday menu to fit their own tastes. For example, many Italian American Thanksgiving meals include Italian specialties, such as pasta and wine.

Many Americans digest their holiday meal while watching football games on television. Traditionally, two National Football League (NFL) teams, the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys, host games on Thanksgiving Day. High viewership of these holiday games has made football an American Thanksgiving tradition.

III Origins

Long before Europeans settled in North America, western Europeans observed Harvest Home festivals to celebrate the successful completion of gathering-in the season’s crops. In the British Isles, Lammas Day (Loaf Mass Day), observed on August 1, was often held to celebrate a good wheat harvest. If the wheat crop was disappointing, the holiday was usually canceled.

Another important precursor to the modern Thanksgiving holiday was the custom among English Puritans (see Puritanism) of designating special days of thanksgiving to express gratitude for God’s blessings. These observances were not held regularly; they usually took place only in times of crisis or immediately after a period of misfortune had passed. Puritan thanksgiving ceremonies were serious religious occasions and bore only a passing resemblance to modern Thanksgiving celebrations.

IV American Thanksgivings

According to tradition, the first American Thanksgiving was celebrated in 1621 by the English Pilgrims who had founded the Plymouth Colony, now in the state of Massachusetts. The Pilgrims marked the occasion by feasting with their Native American guests—members of the Wampanoag tribe—who brought gifts of food as a gesture of goodwill. Although this event was an important part of American colonial history, there is no evidence that any of the participants thought of the feast as a thanksgiving celebration. Two years later, during a period of drought, a day of fasting and prayer was changed to one of thanksgiving because rains came during the prayers. Gradually the custom prevailed among New Englanders to annually celebrate Thanksgiving after the harvest.

Colonial governments and, later, state governments took up the Puritan custom of designating thanksgiving days to commemorate various public events. Gradually the tradition of holding annual thanksgiving holidays spread throughout New England and into other states. During the American Revolution (1775-1783) the Continental Congress proclaimed a national day of thanksgiving following the American victory at the Battle of Saratoga in 1777. U.S. President George Washington proclaimed another day of thanksgiving in 1789 in honor of the ratification of the Constitution of the United States. In 1817 New York State adopted Thanksgiving Day as an annual custom, and many other states soon did the same. Most of the state celebrations were held in November, but not always on the same day.

In the mid-19th century Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey’s Ladies Book, led a movement to establish Thanksgiving as a national holiday. In 1863, during the American Civil War (1861-1865), President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday in November Thanksgiving Day in order to bolster the Union’s morale. After the war, Congress established Thanksgiving as a national holiday, but widespread national observance caught on only gradually. Many Southerners saw the new holiday as an attempt to impose Northern customs on them. However, in the late 19th century Thanksgiving’s emphasis on home and family appealed to many people throughout the United States. As a distinctly American holiday, Thanksgiving was also considered an introduction to American values for the millions of immigrants then entering the country.

During the 20th century, as the population of the United States became increasingly urban, new Thanksgiving traditions emerged that catered to city dwellers. The day after Thanksgiving gradually became known as the first day of the Christmas shopping season. To attract customers, large retailers such as Macy’s in New York City and Gimbel’s in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, began to sponsor lavish parades. By 1934 the Macy’s parade, featuring richly decorated floats and gigantic balloons, attracted more than one million spectators annually.

The custom of watching football games on Thanksgiving Day also evolved during the early decades of the 20th century. As football became increasingly popular in the 1920s and 1930s, many people began to enjoy the holiday at a football stadium. Teams in the National Football League eventually established traditions of playing nationally televised games on Thanksgiving afternoon.

In 1939 U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt shifted the day of Thanksgiving from the last Thursday in November to one week earlier. Retail merchants had petitioned the president to make the change to allow for an extra week of shopping between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Many Americans objected to the change in their holiday customs and continued to celebrate Thanksgiving on the last Thursday of the month. Roosevelt’s political opponents in Congress also opposed the break with tradition and dubbed the early holiday “Franksgiving.†In May 1941 Roosevelt admitted that he had made a mistake and signed a bill that established the fourth Thursday of November as the national Thanksgiving holiday, which it has been ever since.

Thanksgiving is also a legal holiday in Canada. Because Canada is north of the United States, its harvest comes earlier in the year. Accordingly, the Thanksgiving holiday falls earlier in Canada than in the United States. The Canadian Parliament set aside November 6 for annual Thanksgiving observances in 1879. In 1957 the date was shifted to an even earlier day, to the second Monday in October.
Compliments of:encarta :up:


Have Happy Thanksgiving Day!
 
Checking it Out said:
I Introduction
"Most people celebrate Thanksgiving by gathering with family or friends for a holiday feast. "

Unless of course they are represented by the TWU. In which case they will be working 8 hours for 4 hours pay compared to everyone else who gets the day off with pay.

Way to go! For three hours pay per month with the TWU you get to work for less than Non union. But hey somebody has to Pay for Sonnys veiw down Broadway tomorrow, it only cost each and every one of us $9 to get that for him.
 
Dear Sisters and Brothers,

During these extraordinary times we find particular assurance from our Thanksgiving tradition, which reminds us that we, as an institution, people and individually, always have reason to hope and trust in our higher power, despite great adversity.

On behalf of our entire ATD Officers and staff we wish you and all our family good health and happiness during the holiday season and throughout the year.

Happy Thanksgiving!



Sincerely and fraternally,

Jim

James C. Little

International Administrative Vice President
 
It's a shame some choose to live in hate, If you dislike your profession or location so much than change companies. Their is more to life than living in an environmemnt you dislike so much!!!!!
 
Day after Thanksgiving

Defintion

sc-rew-ed

A day that used to be paid time off until Jim Little and the TWU opened the contract early and shafted the union membership.

The tradition of Thanksgiving has been railroaded by the concessions for jobs program of a union that cares more about monthly dues payments than preserving pay and benefits or a profession.
 
Checking it Out said:
It's a shame some choose to live in hate, If you dislike your profession or location so much than change companies. Their is more to life than living in an environmemnt you dislike so much!!!!!
CIO, sometime next year I will make the same statement to you. Just trying to be nice and give you forewarning. Happy Thanksgiving and may god forgive you for your deceptive way of life!
 
Checking it Out said:
It's a shame some choose to live in hate, If you dislike your profession or location so much than change companies. Their is more to life than living in an environmemnt you dislike so much!!!!!
Yeah, so we hate concessions and you love them. Please forgive me.

I love my God, my family, and my profession.

But my love for those three combined couldn't possibly equal the love you and the TWU have for the company. Are eating dinner with your favorite bedwetting managment partner today? You have alot of nerve claiming we dislike our profession, we are the group trying to salvage what is left of it, from 50 years of TWU, socialist, anti-american rulers like you and the other comrades that are never elected always appointed and never accountable.
 
Cio,

We don't need a history lesson on Thanksgiving, we all learned this in the third grade.

We AMFA supporters do not live in hate, but we will fight for our jobs, and we will fight criminals that try to plunder our skills for the almighty dollar, and keep themselves living the high life- i.e. the twu.

You post continous lies and we do not believe a thing you post.

You are a proven liar.

Posting of jim littles' letter is proof you are in denial, you will never be a leader, only a sheep worthy of contempt. Your cowerdice is duly noted.

Do not come on this BB and wish us a Happy Thanksgiving from your twu mouth, it rings very hollow, it does nothing but hurt your case.

I am curious, are you going to be at work tomorrow cio? Or are we paying your sorry ass UB? I think I know the answer. :angry:
 
Checking it Out said:
It's a shame some choose to live in hate, If you dislike your profession or location so much than change companies. Their is more to life than living in an environmemnt you dislike so much!!!!!
A suggestion.
Most people are simply unhappy because of what guys like you CIO have done to them.
Since the TWU is there to serve why don’t you guys pack up and leave?
This might be a way to keep TWU in at AA.
After all if you guys leave, the TWU will be stronger.
Any organization becomes stronger when if it gets rid of the weak and the morons.

Happy Thanksgiving.

I have off tomorrow, and I intent to celebrate my non union negotiated holiday.
Thank God I don’t have the TWU on my side.
 
CIO,
Since you are in the know possibly you can answer a couple questions?
1.Will Jim "higher Power" little be working today for 4 hrs pay?(Thanksgiving day)
2.Will Jim "higher power" Little be with family this weekend (with 4 days off like management)(shared sacrifice?) or will he be back in his office friday?
3. Is right to work wrong because it lowers wages and benefits?
 
Cio, you claim to be about saving jobs yet the only way the company can capitalize on taking days off away from us is to lay people off. Why does/did the TWU advocate losing jobs???
 
Checking it Out said:
It's a shame some choose to live in hate, If you dislike your profession or location so much than change companies.
Wow, what happened to change within, now they want you to leave. Guess what, we will never leave or quit until the twu is gone. Just get use to it or LEAVE. :shock:
 
Checking it Out said:
Dear Sisters and Brothers,

During these extraordinary times we find particular assurance from our Thanksgiving tradition, which reminds us that we, as an institution, people and individually, always have reason to hope and trust in our higher power, despite great adversity.

On behalf of our entire ATD Officers and staff we wish you and all our family good health and happiness during the holiday season and throughout the year.

Happy Thanksgiving!



Sincerely and fraternally,

Jim

James C. Little

International Administrative Vice President
hey jim!!!!!!!!!

blow it out your goat smelling ass!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
:up:

Have noticed that some opinions here such as the Thanksgiving ramble posted by cio come off as smug and hint at an actual pleasure with the oppressive contract we now have... cio, you would do much better to argue the strengths and many accomplishmnets gained over the years by the twu... I would ask that everyone including cio demonstrate professionalism and refrain from personal attacks/namecalling also realize that we are in a state of change both internal and external... Ignoring or trying to block the changes as cio does will in the long run reduce him and his ilk to total obscurity not to be taken seriously, kind of like the buggy whip makers union during the early 1900's as we transistioned to the automobile... People have awakened and change is coming whether you like it or not so instead of taunting your fellow mechanics I suggest you do some serious soul serching and decide if its in yours and twu's best interest to stay the course you are on.. It ain't working pal.. I long for a time when all mechanics are united under one union with senority carried from one employer to next... These ideas must seem resonable why do you resist true strength in numbers and real democracy.. Now post a real answer to this instead of fake info blaming AMFA for layoffs..... List the accomplishments of the twu...... Remember professionalism my friend... ;)