The First Thanksgiving, 1623
By the third year of the Pilgrim settlement, the experiment with communalism having previously resulted in widespread deprivation and death, a theme that continues to this very day for the malignancy known as collectivism, Governor Bradford of Massachusetts perhaps unwittingly acknowledging that property rights always redound in bounteous blessings, made this first Thanksgiving Proclamation, 1623:
Inasmuch as the great Father has given us this year an abundant harvest of Indian corn, wheat, peas, beans, squashes, and garden vegetables, and has made the forests to abound with game and the sea with fish and clams, and inasmuch as He has protected us from the ravages of the savages, has spared us from pestilence and disease, has granted us freedom to worship God according to the dictates of our own conscience.
Now I, your magistrate, do proclaim that all ye Pilgrims, with your wives and ye little ones, do gather at ye meeting house, on ye hill, between the hours of 9 and 12 in the daytime, on Thursday, November 29th, of the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and twenty three and the third year since ye Pilgrims landed on ye Pilgrim Rock, there to listen to ye pastor and render thanksgiving to ye Almighty God for all His blessings.
William Bradford
Ye Governor of Ye Colony
Amen.
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