Washington & Lincoln’s Thanksgiving Celebrations

US #3546 from the Holiday Celebrations Series.  Click the image to order.

On November 26, 1789, the nation celebrated Thanksgiving for the first time under a presidential proclamation.  Decades later, President Lincoln issued a similar proclamation that made the holiday permanent.

Though colonists had held harvest celebrations of thanks since the 1600s, it wasn’t an official holiday celebrated everywhere at the same time.  Rather, it was celebrated in different places, at different times, and for different reasons. 

US #3546 – Plate Block First Day Cover. Click the image to order.

That changed in 1789.  On September 25, Elias Boudinot presented a resolution to the House of Representatives asking that President Washington “recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer… the many signal favors of Almighty God.”

US #3546 – Colorano Silk Cachet First Day Cover. Click the image to order.

Congress approved the resolution and appointed a committee to approach Washington.  Washington agreed and issued his proclamation on October 3.  In it, he asked all Americans to observe November 26 as a day to give thanks to God for their victory in the Revolution as well as their establishment of a Constitution and government.  He then gave it to the governors of each state and asked them to publish it for all to see.  (You can read Washington’s proclamation here.)

US #301 from the Series of 1902-03. Click the image to order.

Washington’s proclamation was then printed in newspapers around the country, leading to public celebrations of Thanksgiving on November 26.  For his part, President Washington attended services at St. Paul’s Chapel in New York City and donated beer and food to those in debtors’ prisons. 

In the years that followed, Presidents John Adams and James Madison issued similar proclamations, but none were permanent.  In 1817, New York officially established an annual Thanksgiving holiday.  Other northern states followed suit, though they weren’t all on the same day.  Some presidents, such as Thomas Jefferson, opposed the proclamations.  He believed it was contradictory to the nation’s beliefs in the separation of church and state.

US #304 is also from the Series of 1902-03. Click the image to order.

Sarah Josepha Hale (famous for the nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb”) began a rigorous campaign in 1827 to make Thanksgiving a national holiday.  She published articles and wrote letters to countless politicians, to no avail.  Finally, in 1863, at the height of the Civil War, President Lincoln received one of her letters and was inspired.

On October 3, Lincoln issued his own proclamation, establishing the last Thursday of November as a day of Thanksgiving.  In particular, to pray for those who lost loved ones in the war and to “heal the wounds of the nation.”  (You can read Lincoln’s proclamation here.)  The first Thanksgiving celebrated under Lincoln’s proclamation was that year on November 26. 

US #4417-20 – The first Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was held in 1924. Click the image to order.

Thanksgiving continued to be celebrated on the last Thursday of November until 1939, when President Franklin Roosevelt moved it up a week to increase retail sales during the Great Depression.  Americans were outraged and dubbed it “Franksgiving.”  Two years later, he reversed his policy and signed a bill making Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday of November, as it has remained ever since.

US #4417-20 – Colorano Silk Cachet First Day Cover. Click the image to order.

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2 Comments

  1. Here we go with fake history by Plymouth Massachusetts. Not only that they try to be the first English settlement in America. Jamestown Virginia was started in 1607 ( 13 years befor 1620). The Jamestown Colony had their own government and had made it through a number of problems. The colony held the First Thanksgiving at the site of Berkeley Plantation on The James River. The date was December 4, 1619 one (1) year and seventeen (17) days befor the
    Pilgrims.

  2. Good article that rightly indicates that Lincoln deserves more credit for creating the holiday than the Pilgrims.

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