Thanksgiving Facts and Myths

Thanksgiving Facts and Myths

Assessment

Flashcard

History

Professional Development

Hard

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14 questions

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1.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

The first Thanksgiving lasted three days.

Back

Fact

Answer explanation

The event commonly referred to as the first Thanksgiving was celebrated in October 1621. It was organized by Governor William Bradford of Plymouth, Massachusetts, to celebrate the recent immigrants' first successful corn harvest in the New World. While the meal lacked much of what is now common Thanksgiving fare—there's no record of turkey being served, for example—there were at least five deer carcasses present, and the event lasted a full three days.

2.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

It’s called Black Friday because it’s the day stores’ numbers are in the black

Back

Myth

Answer explanation

Dictionary.com says Black Friday was first used by factory managers in the 1950s because so many workers called in sick the day after Thanksgiving. It then says that Black Friday was how Philadelphia traffic cops referred to the day in the 1960s because they had to work 12-hour shifts in terrible traffic.

3.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Eating turkey makes you sleepy

Back

Myth

Answer explanation

An amino acid in the turkey called L-tryptophan gets turned into the chemical serotonin by the brain, which can calm people down and make them sleep. But L-tryptophan can only make people sleepy right away if it’s eaten or taken by itself without any other amino acids, which turkey has plenty of.

4.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Frozen had the biggest Thanksgiving opening of any movie.

Back

Fact

Answer explanation

As of today, the 2013 Disney animated musical Frozen is the No. 1 Thanksgiving release of all time, pulling in $93 million domestically.

5.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Thanksgiving has been celebrated every year since the nation’s founding

Back

Myth

Answer explanation

According to the National Archives, George Washington issued a proclamation that named Thursday, November 26, 1789 as a "Day of Publick Thanksgivin". 

At that point, however, Thanksgiving wasn’t codified into law as an annual holiday. It was up to the sitting president to declare a day of “Thanksgiving and Prayer” and set the day and month for the holiday. And there were some years where no such day was declared.

6.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

The woman who got Thanksgiving reinstated as a national holiday also wrote "Mary Had a Little Lamb."

Back

Fact

Answer explanation

Sarah Hale is known as the "Mother of Thanksgiving" because, at a time when the holiday was only celebrated in the Northeast, she spent four decades campaigning for a national day of thanks. In 1863, she finally persuaded then-President Abraham Lincoln to reinstate the holiday nationwide. In addition, Hale was also a successful editor and poet, penning the famous "Mary Had a Little Lamb" and retiring at the ripe age of 90.

7.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Pilgrims Dressed in Black

Back

Myth

Answer explanation

Not only did they not dress in black, they did not wear those funny buckles, weird shoes, or black steeple hats. So how did we get the idea of the buckles? Plimoth Plantation historian James W. Baker explains that in the nineteenth century, when the popular image of the Pilgrims was formed, buckles served as a kind of emblem of quaintness.

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