Thanksgiving Proclamation Memorandum
Original caption: Staffers editing WH Thanksgiving Proclamation.
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document
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WHCF: Holidays
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Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2November 4, 1971
MEMORANDUM FOR:
JOHN EHRLICHMAN
FROM:
RAY PRICE
SUBJECT:
Thanksgiving Proclamation
Attached is a re-draft which picks up most of your changes but
not the endorsement of Virginia's claim. We can't do that! Every
schoolboy in America knows that Thanksgiving began with Pilgrims
and pumpkins and wild New England turkeys more seriously, in
most historical accounts the Virginia claim appears as a mere foot-
note, if at all, even though it's recognized by Virginia and seems
to have been popularized about a dozen years ago by Virginius Dabney.
Incidentally, it wasn't set aside back then as an "annual" day of
Thanksgiving; the 1621 hoedown was followed by one in 1623, and then
became an annual event in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (for awhile
at least) in 1630, with the other New England colonies observing it
sporadically. It spread from New England to the West, appeared as
a custom in the South only about 1855, and didn't become a national
holiday until first proclaimed by Lincoln in 1863.
In putting back in the section that includes the Massachusetts tomb-
stone quote (which is a very good quote, and which we ought to keep),
I've thrown in a reference to the people of the other early settlements
which more clearly broadens the lead in to their gathering in
thanksgiving, so that the proclamation more clearly embraces both
claims.
Sometime I'll have to find out what your special attraction for
Thanksgiving Day proclamations is, that leads you to re-write
them personally each year. You can send me the answer by special
pumpkin.
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