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Home»Archives»Holidays (Page 2)

Happy Thanksgiving to Our Readers Everywhere!

By Alaska Native News on Nov 27, 2025   Featured, General News, Holidays  

Happy Thanksgiving to Our Readers Everywhere!

  The Alaska Native News extends our wishes and hopes that all will have a Happy Thanksgiving regardless of religious, cultural or secular beliefs. May each and everyone find the joy and comfort from the gathering of friends, and family, that each and everyone deserves.

Busting Myths About the First Thanksgiving

By Dora Mekouar | VOA on Nov 27, 2025   Featured, General News, Holidays  

Busting Myths About the First Thanksgiving

Every year, on the fourth Thursday in November, Americans celebrate Thanksgiving. It’s a commemoration of the 1621 harvest feast when the colonists, who came from England, shared a friendly meal with the land’s Indigenous people. In Plymouth, Massachusetts, site of the first Thanksgiving, historians and others try to separate fact from fiction surrounding the legend […]

The First Thanksgiving: A Temporary Peace between Puritans and Tribes

By Cecily Hilleary | VOA News on Nov 27, 2025   Featured, General News, Holidays  

The First Thanksgiving: A Temporary Peace between Puritans and Tribes

WASHINGTON – In the fall of 1621, English settlers at Plymouth marked their first harvest and began stockpiling food for the winter: cod, bass and other fish, venison, wild turkey and duck that could dried or salted to supplement plentiful Indian corn. Tisquantum, commonly known as Squanto, was a member of the Patuxet band of the […]

How George Washington Ignited a Political Firestorm Over Thanksgiving

By Dora Mekouar | VOA on Nov 27, 2025   Featured, General News, Holidays  

How George Washington Ignited a Political Firestorm Over Thanksgiving

Painting of George Washington with his family, wife Martha, and her grandchildren, by artist Edward Savage.  In September 1789, members of America’s first Congress approached the nation’s first president, George Washington, and asked him to call for a national Thanksgiving. That seemingly benign request ignited a furor in Congress over presidential powers and states’ rights. […]

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