Well I won't be heading home to see my folks this year for Thank giving but I think that is all fine. I found out that card did arrive and I am going to call my father tomorrow morning when he is spry as he usually has been. This is a long weekend here and the weather is rather cold and most all of the trees now have shown what we is inevitable. So I do miss my family yet at the same time I know where my own placement is, or maybe it's just another day.
T for time to be together, turkey, talk, and tangy weather.
H for harvest stored away, home, and hearth, and holiday.
A for autumn's frosty art, and abundance in the heart.
N for neighbours, and October, nice things, new things to remember.
K for kitchen, kettles' croon, kith and kin expected soon.
S for sizzles, sights, and sounds, and something special that abounds.
There are three traditions behind our Canadian Thanksgiving Day.
Long ago, before the first Europeans arrived in North America, the farmers in Europe held celebrations at harvest time. To give thanks for their good fortune and the abundance of food, the farm workers filled a curved goat's horn with fruit and grain. This symbol was called a cornucopia or horn of plenty. When they came to Canada they brought this tradition with them.
In the year 1578, the English navigator Martin Frobisher held a formal ceremony, in what is now called Newfoundland, to give thanks for surviving the long journey. He was later knighted and had an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean in northern Canada named after him - Frobisher Bay. Other settlers arrived and continued these ceremonies.
The third came in the year 1621, in what is now the United States, when the Pilgrims celebrated their harvest in the New World. The Pilgrims were English colonists who had founded a permanent
European settlement at Plymouth Massachusetts. By the 1750's, this joyous celebration was brought to Nova Scotia by American settlers from the south.At the same time, French settlers, having crossed the ocean and arrived in Canada with explorer
Samuel de Champlain, also held huge feasts of thanks. They even formed "The Order of Good Cheer" and gladly shared their food with their Indian neighbours.After the Seven Year's War ended in 1763, the citizens of Halifax held a special day of Thanksgiving.The Americans who remained faithful to the government in England were known as Loyalists. At the time of the American revolution, they moved to canada and spread the Thanksgiving celebration to other parts of the country. many of the new English settlers from Great Britain were also used to
having a harvest celebration in their churches every autumn.Eventually in 1879, Parliament declared November 6th a day of Thanksgiving and a national holiday. Over the years many dates were used for Thanksgiving, the most popular was the 3rd Monday in October. After World War I, both Armistice Day and Thanksgiving were celebrated on the Monday of the week in which November 11th occurred. Ten years later, in 1931, the two days
became separate holidays and Armistice Day was renamed Remembrance Day. Finally, on January 31st, 1957, Parliament proclaimed...."A Day of General Thanksgiving to Almighty God for the bountiful harvest with which Canada has been blessed... to be observed on the second Monday in October."
Happy Thanksgiving!
ReplyDeleteI'm not going home either as dad is doing chemo and they have quarentined themselves. And, dad is having a reaction to the last 'pill'. I think there is only one more 'pill' to go. It's nearly killed him.
So, I'll roast a turkey for my tribe on Monday. My youngest son turned 31 at 7:30 this morning so we'll be celebrating his birthday at the same time.
We will be spending a quiet weekend at home and will most likely have the children over for Thanksgiving supper, nothing extravagant, just a tasty home cooked roast beef.
ReplyDeleteHave a great Thansgiving weekend.
What a great & well written story on the History of Thanksgiving & how it started & has expanded from there Joe. Thank you for sharing that & I just love that Thanks poem. HAPPY THANKSGIVING to you my friend XX
ReplyDeleteWhatever you're doing, have a great time.
ReplyDeleteG'day Jack,
ReplyDeleteI think the whole concept is a wonderful one, when so many of us have so much to be thankful for it is nice to actually celebrate it in our own way, enjoy it doing whatever you feel does it for you
Yes, it's a cold morning as it's -2c not sure what that is in Fahrenheit but it's a good day, just having a late awakening and spoke with my father and wished him a belated happy birthday. I would have headed back home but I was not sure if what happened yesterday would effect my travels. And I wish to just have some of my own time and I see it as just a nice long weekend. And maybe there will be some time to do some things with my camera and as well read a book.
ReplyDeleteIf you ask me why we celebrate it earlier than the United States I think it was because the Pilgrims the climate was colder here and the crops needed to come off earlier - and "Billy Bob" ~The Pilgrim~ had a big appetite. : )
G'day Jack,
ReplyDeleteI can tell you what it is in Fahrenheit it is ruddy cold, lol (28)
have a goody my friend
Have a great long weekend Jack.
ReplyDeleteThere's much to be thankful for even if it's heating and the space to spend some me time.....enjoy.
Happy Thanksgiving...
T for time to be together, turkey, talk, and tangy weather.
ReplyDeleteH for harvest stored away, home, and hearth, and holiday.
A for autumn's frosty art, and abundance in the heart.
N for neighbours, and October, nice things, new things to remember.
K for kitchen, kettles' croon, kith and kin expected soon.
S for sizzles, sights, and sounds, and something special that abounds.
I really like this spelling of the word thanks that you posted. Giving thanks at Thanksgiving.
There is regardless we give "thanks" to what we do have rather than what we don't have.
ReplyDeleteThat what it's about Lise and it's a thought within words that resonates as we both are in Canada and we celebrate it in our own ways at this time. Alberta, Quebec, Saskatchewan, and all the provinces within Canada, but it's something different to each one of us. And within America we have the same thing but just at different times and history tell us why. Yeah....
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving to you!
ReplyDeleteAnd the same to you!
ReplyDelete