30 Thanksgiving facts to share with your family

How much Turkey we eat at the origins of the first Thanksgiving, you will eat this trivial up.


Thanksgiving is aspecial holidays For many reasons, popular food, family and football are just a few. Less well known, however, are the many fascinating facts behind the holiday history, traditions and myths. The truth is, for many of us, there is a lot, we do not know the party we celebrate allFourth November Thursday. So before cutting up the turkey of your family this year, take the time to learn some of Thanksgiving's most interesting facts that we could find. At the very least, you will have (and harmless) conversation dinner to contribute. And for what does this strange year,The CDC says that these are the risk more risky thanksgiving activities to avoid.

1
The next day Thanksgiving is the busiest day of the year for plumbers.

black female plumber working on a sink
Monkey Business Images / Shutterstock

Black Friday is not just big companies for retailers: plumbers and debouching people get in action too. According to Roto-Rooter,The next day of Thanksgiving Is the most busy day of the year for those who keep the water flowing and going to houses and businesses. In the news, they do not recommend pouring cooking oil in your drain. For more information needed for the owners, seeIt is the most germ infested article in your home, material study.

2
Americans eat 704 million turkey books every Thanksgiving.

Young white man taking turkey out of oven
Monkey Business Images / Shutterstock

According to the National Federation Turkey, around44 million turkeys were served for thanksgiving In the United States in 2017. This is compared to 22 million pounds at Christmas and 19 million to Easter. The average weight of each one was 16 pounds, which means that we engulf from 704 million books of turkey across the country.

3
The Butterball Hotline answers questions related to 100,000 turkey each year.

group of telemarketers taking calls at work
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Butterball, a popular turkey company, opens aHotline Turkey Every November and December to answer all the issues related to turkey, you may have. Founded in 1981, Turkey speaks went to receive a 11,000 modest first year questions to respond to more than 100,000 through questions in the United States and Canada each holiday season. Before calling this number, consult these23 Fascinating Turkey Facts Just in Time for Thanksgiving.

4
"Jingle Bells" was originally a Thanksgiving song.

Silver jingle bells on blue background
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"Jingle Bells", the classic Christmas song written byJames Lord Pierpont In 1857, was not supposed to be about Christmas. Initially entitled "One Horse Sleigh Open," The Channel should be sung on the action of graces. When he was reissued in 1859, however, the name was changed for "Jingle Bells, or an open sleigh horse" and was prescribed for Christmas.

5
FDR, once you move Thanksgiving a week.

Bronze statue of Franklin D Roosevelt
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In the midst of the Great Depression, PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt Thanksgiving moved Until a week to allow more time to go shopping before Christmas. In the opposite case, it would have fallen on November 30 the movement aroused the reaction of the intense public, but not as memorable as the cascade drawn by Atlantic City is then mayor,CD. White. In a declaration published the day before the new thanksgiving action by Roosevelt, White announced that his city will celebrate two days of thank you and that the previous date would bebe known as "Franksgiving."

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6
The first Thanksgiving lasted three days.

Painting of the first Thanksgiving
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The event commonly called the first Thanksgiving was celebrated in October 1621. It was organized byGovernor William Bradford From Plymouth, Massachusetts, to celebrate the recent maize harvest of immigrants in the new world. While the meal lacked a lot of what is now priced Thanksgiving common has no trace of turkey served, for example, there wasAt least five deer carcasses present, and the event lasted three complets.

7
The woman who got the action of graces readmitted as National Day also wrote "Mary Had a Little Lamb. »

Sarah Hale portrait
Congress Library

Sarah Hale is known as "Mother of thanksgiving"Because at a time when the holiday was celebrated only in the North, she spent four decades campaigning for a national day of thanksgiving. In 1863, she finally convinced then-PresidentAbraham Lincoln restore the party throughout the country. Moreover, Hale also has a successful poet and editor, penning the famous "Mary Had a Little Lamb" and retiring at the ripe age of 90.

For the season film almost everyone will look this year, seeThis is the most popular single Holiday movie of all time, Survey Results.

8
George H. W. "sorry" Presidential Bush a turkey was a joke of sorts.

Turkey Pardon George H.W. Bush
Image via Presidential Library

The tradition of American presidents receiving turkeys as gifts can be found in the 1870s, but it wasHarry S. Truman who became the first to receive the National Board of Directors of poultry and eggs and the National Turkey Federation in 1947. He was perhaps destined, perhaps, as a peace offering by the poultry industry after the egg producers sent crates of live chickens at the White House labeled "hens for Harry," an act of protest against the encouragement of "poultry less poultry." And although theTruman Library and Museum conflicts he was the first to "sorry" Presidential Turkeyblurred tradition Presidents receiving - but not eat eat turkeys. It continued under the administrations of Kennedy, Nixon, Carter and Reagan.

In 1989, following this tradition, the first official Turkey "sorry" was granted byGeorge H. W. Bush. With animal rights activists standing nearby, the president brought that "this beautiful Tom Turkey ... will not end the table from anyone, not like this. - he granted a presidential pardon from now" The rest, as they say,Is the story.

9
Canada celebrates Thanksgiving totally different.

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You would have thought Thanksgiving was uniquely American, but it iscelebrated in Canada, too much. Instead of the last Thursday in November, however, it falls on the second Mondayof every October. The first to be declared at the national level was held in 1872 to celebrate the medical recovery of the Prince of Wales. The prince was suffering from a fever that had "fill [ed] the spirit of the faithful subjects with anxiety deepest," theThe Perth Gazette and Western Australia. And that's why our northern neighbors thanks!

10
The parade balloons the day of Thanksgiving Macy were just left to go after the show.

Felix the Cat balloon at Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
Rachel Cauvin / Alamy Stock Photo

Thefirst large-scale balloon Used in the parade the day after Thanksgiving Macy was Felix the Cat in 1927, replacing the old zoo animals used in the first three iterations of the parade. Because there was no plan to deflate the balloons, most were simply allowed to float then. Unfortunately, this strategy has not been very effective, as most appear shortly after being released.

11
Before 1997, there was no size regulation on parade balloons the day of Thanksgiving Macy.

Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade Pink Panther balloon
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In 1997, Barney was Balloontorn along its abdomen Due to strong winds, while the Pink Panther would be handle by the police to be stabilized. The worst event was held, meanwhile, when the Cat in the Hat hit a lamppost at 72nd Street, then crumpled to the ground. In response to the 1997 disaster, the regulation of the organizers of the size of the established parade which required that all balloons are not over 70 feet tall, 78 feet long and 40 feet wide.

12
Approximately 50 million people watching the parade every year the day after Thanksgiving Macy.

Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade from above
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Approximately50 million Americans Tune in every year the parade the day after Thanksgiving Macy. 3.5 million people to 3.5 million people see it in person and about 10 000 years of participation in non-pandemic years, at least. And although the show did not start until 9 am and many spectators arrive from 6:30 to rent in the streets of New York for a place along the road.

13
More people travel to Orlando, Florida than anywhere else on Thanksgiving.

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According to AAA estimates, more55 million Americans traveled 50 miles or more For Thanksgiving in 2019. The most popular of these destinations - according to the booking information - were Orlando, Florida, followed by near Anaheim, California, then New York. There is no doubt that 2020 traffic models will look quite different because the pandemic has people in the shelter, but these places are probably as popular in 2021.

14
The original television dinner was the result of a bad cycle error of Thanksgiving.

microwave tv dinner
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The original television dinner was the result of aThanksgiving miscalculation. In 1953, an executive toSwanson has miscalculated The next sales of Thanksgiving Turkey of the company, leaving the company with some 260 tons of frozen chicken after the holidays. Fortunately for Swanson, a seller by the name ofGerry Thomas Suggested packaging of excess product in trays - as well as traditional sides - and sell them to consumers as television dinners. Thomas was apparently inspired by the pre-portionary trays used to serve aircraft food.

15
More than four fifths of Americans prefer leftovers at the meal.

Thanksgiving leftovers plate
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According to a survey of Harris 2015, a vast majority of Americans (81%)Prefer the remains of the Thanksgiving mealat the meal itself. Another discovery: The millennia look forward to the part the turkey of the lower meal with any other age group.

16
Red wine is the most popular thanksgiving rate.

People drinking red wine with Thanksgiving dinner
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According to a 2017 survey by the Alcohol Delivery Service, about50% of households serve red wine With Thanksgiving dinner. Only 10% go with white. The rest pays something else, whether gaseous drinks, beers or cocktails.

17
Turkey is not to blame your post-dinner crisis.

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A widely accepted myth will make you believe that it is the main dish of the meal that makes you impatient a nap after eating Thanksgiving dinner. But it's time to stop blamingTurkey and its tryptophan For your slowness. Although amino acid helps your body produce melatonin, which promotes relaxation and sleep, Turkey no longer than its poultry brothers. So why the immediate desire of nod? Because eating a big meal - any big meal makes you sleepy.

18
A city of Connecticut delayed Thanksgiving because of a shortage of pumpkin pie.

Pumpkin pie slice with cinnamon sticks
Shutterstock / Kim Reinick

Well, somehow. The pumpkin pies were mainly popular as a Thanksgiving dessert in New England at the beginning of the 18th century, becoming more synonymous with holidays across the country at the beginning of the 20th century. But according to the story, the city ofColchester in Connecticut Accepted to hold the holidays a week when a molasses model threatened their ability to make soft gourd.

19
The weight gain of the holidays represents most of the thickening associated with aging.

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According to a 2000 study published in theNew England Journal of Medicine, theThe average person wins a book between the holidays of Thanksgiving and Christmas. Coupled to the fact that most individuals tend to earn a book a year in adulthood, this seasonal thickening can play an important role in the general weight gain that accompanies age.

20
Two texas cities claim to be the site of the first Thanksgiving.

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While the "first Thanksgiving" is generally considered an aforementioned meal in 1621 in Plymouth, Massachusetts, there are at least two cities of Texas claiming to have been the site of previous Thanksgiving holidays. El Paso, for one, claims that it was host to athank you Celebrated by Spanish ExplorerJuan de Oñate In 1598. The City observed that Thanksgiving every April since 1989. Another complaint made byTexas girls from American settlers, says the first Thanksgiving was observed by Spanish ExplorerFrancisco Vázquez de Coronado and its expedition to Palo Duro Canyon in 1541. The researchers have discovered details to suggest otherwise.

21
The first National Thanksgiving was declared by George Washington.

Portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart
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The first national Thanksgiving was declared byPresident George Washington and was celebrated on November 26, 1789. In his "Thanksgiving proclamation of 1789"Washington defines the day as a pious weather to thank God for, among other things, protect Americans and help them achieve independence.

22
The turkeys are named after the country - the result of the confusion on the birds.

sunset over Istanbul, Turkey
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During the time of the Ottoman Empire, Guinea's birds that look closely like turkeys - were often imported from their North Aboriginal Africa to Europe, to eat. Since Europeans have received them from Turkish traders, they referred them as Turkey-Hens or Turkey-Cocks. When the settlers of the Americas began to send what we call the turkeys to their European counterparts, the last confused by the resemblance - began to refer to them by the same name. Thereby,We have turkeys!

23
Minnesota raises the most turkeys in the United States.

turkey in the wild
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The turkeys apparently prefer cold temperatures and friendly neighbors: from all American states, Minnesota raised the most turkeys in 2017, according to theUSDA. In fact, the 450 farms of Turkey of the State are responsible for18% All turbines high and sold in the United States annually. While the Minnesota has been perpetually at the top of the rating of the producers of National Turkey since the beginning of the records started in 1929, they remained in the very high point since North Carolina slowed production in 2003.

24
The first game of Thanksgiving "Football" predicts the National Football League.

Patriots play the Eagles in 2012
Debby Wong / Shutterstock

According to the Princeton website, on Thanksgiving in 1876,Princeton and Yale students Squared to Hoboken, New Jersey, playing "What would be better described as a rugby form at 11 out of 11." The school fair has become annual annual, possibly moving to New York, where 40,000 fans showed in 1893.

25
Benjamin Franklin liked the turkeys more than the white-headed eagles.

Portrait of Benjamin Franklin by Jean Baptiste Greuze
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There is a myth, which isjust one of the many in American history, thisBenjamin Franklin Presented Turkey-a bird he occupied in a much higher esteem than the bald eagle engaging-as a replacement of the official Avian representative of America. The misconception probably comes fromA letter he wrote to his daughter In which he lamented that "Bald Eagle ... is a bird of bad moral character. He does not make his life honestly ... [he] is too lazy to fish for himself", while Turkey is " A bird much more respectable ". But it is as far as his Fandom from Turkey went.

26
The tradition of cracking of the wish is an old.

Snapping the wishbone
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For some, Thanksgiving dinner is not complete before the desire of the bird is stuck, offering a chance on the wearer of the biggest room. Would you believe that this custom is thousands of years more than the holidays?Wishing bone Back to Etruscan ancients, who used chickens to help predict the future. After the death of the chickens, the etruscans would dry their wishes or furulation in the sun and would keep them as charms of good luck.

27
Thanksgiving is America's second favorite festival.

Family sitting around the table and celebrating Thanksgiving
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According to another Harris survey, this one of 2011,Thanksgiving is the second favorite party Among American adults, behind Christmas and Halloween for the millennia, Gen Xers and Baby Boomers. At least we can all agree on that!

28
Thanksgiving is the most popular day of the American race.

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World runners report thatThanksgiving was the most popular holiday for the race For a large part of the 2010 years. "In recent years, Turkey Trots has become synonymous with Thanksgiving as Turkey itself," saysMichael Schiferl, EVP of media integrated with Weber Shandwick. "In fact, more than a million people participate in less than 1,300 races in the United States, making Thanksgiving preparation the biggest race day of the whole year".

29
Sixty percent of Americans would prefer to do anything but think about what they are grateful for Thanksgiving.

Rocks marked with messages about gratitude
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AsAmy morin, LCSW, wrote forPsychology today71%Americans report the feeling of stress During the holiday season from Thanksgiving. In addition, three out of five respondents said they preferred to do something other than thinking aboutwhat they are grateful forDuring Thanksgiving, including such activities by looking at football, reading a book or playing with a pet. Twelve percent of the Americans even said they prefer to spend time on their smartphone than having a significant conversation with their families. But here's why it's time to change that ...

30
Give again makes families closer and happier.

Group of people cleaning up a park
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Thanksgiving is, for many, at a time not only to be grateful, but also to restore: attend the countless examples of individualsGift of their time Serve or cook Thanksgiving meals in need. Did you know, however, that a strong tradition of retiring to vacation as Thanksgiving-can put your family for a life of happiness? According to a survey conducted by Fidelity Charity, 48% of people who grew up "With strong traditions"We are considered happy today compared to 33% of people who have not grown up with such traditions. It also helps to keep families together: 81% of people with strong traditions have reported that their main family is "Very close" compared to 71 percentage of people without a strong tradition.


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