Gratitude and Perseverance

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

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MenendezImageOn 6 September 1565, five Spanish ships commanded by Admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés anchored off the northeast coast of Florida in a harbor the Spaniards had mapped and named "San Augustín" earlier that week. Menéndez was neither the first European nor the first Spaniard to cast a conquering eye upon Florida. Enemy French Huguenots had already occupied several settlements along the coast, one just a few miles to the north. Menéndez had been ordered to eradicate them. When he and his landing party stepped ashore, they were greeted by a delegation of Native Americans speaking the Timucuan dialect. Their ancestors had arrived in Florida ten thousand years earlier. They knew the drill for dealing with Europeans.

No pressure, Pedro.

Within a few months, Menéndez and the Spaniards had permanently routed the French military presence in Florida. During that time, several makeshift Spanish forts were destroyed by fire, but the Spaniards rebuilt them. The earliest portions of the city of St. Augustine may have dated from that time.

For most of the remaining years of the sixteenth century, Indians assaulted the settlement at St. Augustine, and for the next two hundred years, the Spaniards contended with fire, famine, disease, hurricanes, and pirates. Settlement of Florida seemed jinxed, and several times, the Spanish government nearly pulled the plug on the enterprise. But each time buildings were destroyed, the Spaniards rebuilt. After each famine or disease epidemic, the population rebounded. The city grew.

In 1763, the Treaty of Paris accomplished what centuries of fire, famine, disease, hurricanes, and pirates had failed to do. The flag of Britain was raised over El Castillo de San Marcos, the squarish castle made of coquina stone that anchors the city. All but three Spaniards relocated to Cuba that year. (One who remained was Luciano de Herrera, who became a spy for the Governor of Cuba. He makes a cameo appearance in my first book, Paper Woman.) In 1784, the Spaniards returned to St. Augustine, courtesy of the second Treaty of Paris. In 1821, Spain ceded East Florida to the United States.

CastilloEvery time I contemplate the history of St. Augustine, I marvel at the perseverance and resilience of the Spaniards. St. Augustine is the oldest surviving European settlement in the United States, predating Jamestown, Virginia by almost half a century. El Castillo de San Marcos, which dates from 1672, is still standing, an impressive feat of engineering.

The Spaniards who called St. Augustine home were tough. How did they stick it out for so long? Florida was a frontier for Spain—a money pit without the glamour of Spanish conquests in Central and South America. Thus many a Spanish governor in St. Augustine made do with little or no regular supplies from the mother country.

What records show is that despite their hardship, residents in St. Augustine found ways to honor a saint's day or give gratitude for a shipload of supplies or a birth in the royal family. Sometimes a governor would contribute from his own pocket, help create a multi-day fête because the citizens needed the gesture of celebration.

Gratitude helped the Spaniards persevere in Florida for more than two centuries. In history, gratitude and perseverance are often found together.

Before the jingle-jangle rush smothers the last embers of Thanksgiving, remember the words of Edward Sandford Martin: "Thanksgiving Day comes, by statute, once a year; to the honest man it comes as frequently as the heart of gratitude will allow." (Thanks to reader Liz Veronis for the quote.)

If you're in St. Augustine the first Saturday of December, make sure you attend the annual British Night Watch and Grand Illumination. It's a lovely way to kick off your holiday season.

So now we've made Thanksgiving last eleven days! And that time wouldn’t have been possible without you or my talented guest authors: Suzanne Tyrpak, Peg Herring, Margaret Lake, M. E. Kemp, and Gwen Mayo. What worlds can they open for you? Browse back through the posts. Give these authors your patronage.

Then comment on something you learned at "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" during the Gratitude Giveaways Hop that made history relevant to you. Thanks for stopping by!

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AdairRegulatedForMurderCoverLoResI'm giving away an ebook copy of my latest release, Regulated for Murder, to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Sunday 27 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Multiple file formats are available. No eReader required.

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Did you like what you read? Learn about downloads, discounts, and special offers from Relevant History authors and Suzanne Adair. Subscribe to Suzanne's free newsletter.

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Post-Civil War Thanksgiving

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

GwenMayoAuthorPhoto01Relevant History welcomes back historical mystery author Gwen Mayo. Mayo grew up in the hills of Eastern Kentucky, but moved to Lexington in order to study politics and history at the University of Kentucky. She is a member of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, Sisters in Crime, and the Historical Novel Society. Her debut novel, Circle of Dishonor, set in post-Civil War Kentucky, was published by Pill Hill Press. For more information, check her web site and blog.

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In 1879 President Rutherford B. Hayes recommended that on November 27, Americans "[withdraw] themselves from secular cares and labors…and give thanks and praise to Almighty God for his mercies." Churches all around Lexington, Kentucky held Thanksgiving services, but after morning devotions there were private and community celebrations. Kentuckians could choose to stay at home for feasting or attend public events.

So what was Thanksgiving like in Lexington? Pumpkin races were held on the on the infield of the racing track. Contestants used wooden spoons to roll the pumpkins to the finish line. Ladies competed in baking contests for either best pie or best cake. On the track, Brown Betty races were held. The "Brown Betty" was a chocolate brown pottery jug filled with bourbon. Instead of Kentucky's famous thoroughbreds lining up at the track, the Lexington Racing Association placed a Brown Betty at the finish line and men raced to see who could claim the prize. Winners of each heat progressed to the next round, and progressively larger jugs of bourbon were awarded to the champions. I am not sure of the wisdom of the timing, but following the races, there were shooting contests in the infield.

Thanksgiving at home included parlor games before dinner. One of the popular ones in Kentucky was the corn game, where five ears of corn were hidden. The guests or family members who found an ear would race at shelling the corn into a dish, the winner being the person who could shell corn fastest. Word games were also popular, as were singing competitions.

Tables were laid with the finest linens and best dishes. Dinner Victorian style was a grand event: pumpkin or oyster soup, large mouth bass, fried oysters or catfish, followed by fruit, cheeses, and dried nuts. Then the serious eating began: wild turkey, duck, or goose followed by ham or roast beef, or venison, sweet potatoes, stewed tomatoes, mashed potatoes, deviled eggs, sweet corn, peas, greens, and squash. Breads and relishes remained on the table throughout the meal. Diners expected to have an ample supply of horseradish, slaw, chow-chow (a green-tomato relish), celery, radishes, carrot, pickle, and raw turnip available. Desserts included mince pies (served flaming), pumpkin pie, apple stack cake, chocolate, and coconut, or fruit pies, and ice cream.

It is no wonder that so many of the Victorian age died of heart disease.

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GwenMayoBookCoverA big thanks to Gwen Mayo. She'll give away an electronic copy of Circle of Dishonor in Kindle, Nook, or PDF format to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose one winner from among those who comment on this post by 26 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November.

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Thanksgiving’s Different Faces in Revolutionary America

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

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The Declaration of Independence can be viewed as a long, specific list of points on which Britain and the patriot faction in its North American colonies disagreed. In the practice of thanksgiving, we find another example of those ideological differences.

During the first six decades of the eighteenth century, each of Britain's colonies celebrated events such as bountiful harvests in separate ways. The colonies didn't unite for the first time in thanksgiving until after the Congress had declared independence from Britain, and the Continental and British armies were slugging it out. The Congress then appointed specific thanksgiving days and recommended the observation of them for each state. Here are those days of thanksgiving:

  • 18 December 1777, to celebrate the Continental Army's victory over Crown forces at Saratoga
  • 30 December 1778, to honor the alliance with France
  • 7 December 1780, to rejoice that George Washington had avoided being captured by Crown forces during Benedict Arnold's defection
  • 13 December 1781, to celebrate the Continental Army's victory over Crown forces at Yorktown

Today, residents of the United States might be baffled at the austere nature of these thanksgiving days for those who were patriots. Each day was designated a day of fasting and prayer. No feasting, no playing. Many patriots who were Christians eschewed revelry, particularly when it was associated with a religious holiday such as Christmas. They sought to distinguish themselves from celebrations that they considered corrupt and immoral. Some of those celebrations were associated with Britain and the Anglican Church. Thus Christmas and Congress-designated days of thanksgiving were somber, low-key affairs.

In contrast are the celebrations of gratitude from loyalists and Crown forces. M. E. Kemp mentioned the flourish with which Guy Fawkes' Day was celebrated in the colonies: fireworks, bonfires, feasting, drinking, brawling. Colonists had good reason to celebrate; had Guy Fawkes and his cohorts been successful in the infamous "Gunpowder Plot" of 1605, the House of Lords would have been blown up, and King James I of England might have been assassinated. Twenty-first century Britons continue to celebrate Guy Fawkes Day.

At the time of the War of Independence, most people associated with the British empire were still honoring the ancient, annual rhythm of solstices and equinoxes. (Consider how many of them made a living off the land and thus had to stay attuned to the seasons.) So for the winter solstice, Crown forces might have had a feast and dance similar to the Yule party I depict in my third book, Camp Follower, with roast pork and vegetables for men of rank and file, and a multi-course feast for officers, followed by dancing. The customs of Yule log and bonfire at the center of such festivities hearkened back to practices of Neolithic people who, on the shortest day of the year, gave thanks for the return of the sun.

Regardless of whether we prefer our thanksgiving no-frill or well-adorned, at its heart, every celebration of gratitude is about pausing to acknowledge that each of us is part of something much larger than a simple congregation of individuals. Life endows us with certain blessings. Perhaps the greatest show of gratitude we can make is in converting our unique blessings into gifts that help others.

Happy Thanksgiving! For what are you grateful?

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AdairRegulatedForMurderCoverLoResI'm giving away an ebook copy of my latest release, Regulated for Murder, to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Thursday 24 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Multiple file formats are available. No eReader required.

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A Puritan Thanksgiving

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, “The British Are Coming, Y’all!” From 17–27 November, I’m participating with several hundred other bloggers in the “Gratitude Giveaways Hop,” accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We’ll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

MEKempAuthorPhotoRelevant History welcomes back M. E. Kemp, who writes a historical mystery series featuring two nosy Puritans as detectives. She lives in Saratoga Springs, NY. For more information, check her web site.

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Ninety years after the Pilgrim’s Feast of Thanksgiving, the Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony still celebrated the holiday—only it might be in July or in May or in January, depending upon what occasion for which to be thankful. That might be for the end of King Phillip’s War or the arrival of a sloop bearing kegs of molasses.

And Thanksgiving didn’t originate with the Pilgrims, either, but with celebrations for various causes by the Church of England. In fact, Guy Fawkes Day was a much more celebrated occasion on November 5th, the day Fawkes tried to blow up the British Parliament. In Boston it became a rowdy holiday with the North End rivaling the South End, both Ends parading around the streets carrying a “Guy,” a straw dummy until they finally met up and ended in a huge brawl and a bonfire. (Note from Suzanne Adair: Check out a picture of the “Guy” as well as my account of the Guy Fawkes celebration 5 November 2011 at the annual Battle of Camden reenactment.)

When the Puritans did decide it was time for a thanksgiving, it was a veritable feast with turkey, to be sure, but also with beef, venison, all kinds of waterfowl, ham, shellfish and other bounties of the sea. (I confess I’m envious of those days when six-foot lobsters washed up on the beaches after a storm. Lobster was so plentiful it was considered a trash-fish. Now, that’s the kind of trash food I could go for!) Pumpkins and apples played a large part in the feast, in forms besides pies. Both foods were dried for use over the winter.

And there was drink—lots of hard liquor! Our ancestors were lushes. Beer and hard cider were everyday drinks, with wine, brandy and rum; rum-punches being a favorite of gatherings. Even the ministers imbibed ungodly amounts of liquor at their ordination dinners. They welcomed new ministers into the fold with every kind of liquor available. Tavern bills show this to be the case. Of course, you were expected to hold your drink. Drunkenness was fined, preached against from the pulpit, and perhaps even meant a spell in jail. Our ancestors must have had stomachs of iron. We can ourselves give thanks that we don’t have to drink concoctions like “Sparke’s Special,” which consisted of beer, rum, molasses and breadcrumbs. Yuck! Yet if you survived the diseases of childhood, barring accident, you lived to a ripe old age. Well, you were probably well-preserved by all that liquor!

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A big thanks to M. E. Kemp. She’ll give away a book cover pin to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I’ll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Wednesday 23 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Delivery is available within the U.S. only.

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The First Thanksgiving: the Pilgrims and What Really Happened

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

MargaretLakeAuthorPhoto Relevant History welcomes historical romance author Margaret Lake. Reading has always been Margaret's passion. Her other passion is history, especially English History, which began when she first read Anya Seton's novel, Catherine. When the inspiration came to write her first book, she naturally gravitated to the Wars of the Roses. Her favorite author is Susan Howatch, her favorite book is Outlander, and her favorite series is Harry Potter. She leads a Harry Potter book club at the elementary school and also assists with the chess club. Margaret has just rescued a nine-year old Jack Russell Terrier mix named Angelo. For more information, check her web site and follow her on Twitter.

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We all learned about the first Thanksgiving feast in elementary school. Kindergarten children make feathered headdresses and Pilgrim hats out of construction paper. We eat too much turkey and green bean casserole and pumpkin pie to celebrate the survival of our forefathers in 1621.

MargaretLakeBookCoverBut what about our foremothers? I recently wrote a novelette about the Pilgrims and Indians entitled "Sweet Savage Charity." Being a history addict, I researched my subject beyond what we learned in school. I was surprised to find that only four adult women survived that first winter. Four adult women to care for 50 men and twenty children. I shudder to think.

The Pilgrims lived as a community those first years. The men hunted and fished and tended the fields. Food stores went into the communal pot. The women cooked, cleaned, did laundry and mending for the entire community. No doubt the children helped, but some of them were infants and toddlers and needed a lot of care. Probably the older girls watched the younger ones while the older boys went off with the men.

The women also gathered berries, dug for clams and mussels and fetched the water and firewood. When the men returned with game, it was the women that cleaned and prepared the meat. Mending was a constant chore as they had no spinning wheels or looms to make cloth.

There was no such thing as having a "headache" after a long and arduous day. The men were allowed to beat their wives for refusing their conjugal rights. As proof, just look at Elizabeth Warren who arrived in 1623. She died at age 93 with 75 great-grandchildren. Her husband died 45 years earlier and she never remarried. I expect she felt she had more than done her duty.

Mary Chilton, by tradition the first person to set foot on Plymouth Rock, gave birth to ten children. She was only 16 when she arrived and soon to be an orphan. She didn't marry until 1627. I don't blame her for taking her time.

The next ship to arrive some weeks after the feast, brought 35 men; no women. More cooking and cleaning for our foremothers.

Women finally started arriving in 1623 on the Ann and the James. Patience Brewster* came on the Ann in 1623, but only survived long enough to give birth to three children. She was married to Thomas Prence who later became governor. However, he married three more times. Obviously he needed someone to cook and clean and tend the children.

Back to the Autumn of 1621 on that historic day when 90 Indians arrived with five deer. Can you imagine how these four women felt when all those men showed up for dinner? Talk about unexpected company.

"Honey, I brought a few of the guys home for the weekend," said the Pilgrim father happily.

The Pilgrim mother gritted her teeth as five eviscerated deer were dumped at her feet.

"How nice," she grated. "May I see you in the kitchen, Dear?"

Massasoit mumbles to Squanto out of the side of his mouth. "I told him he should have called ahead."

Sure, they brought their own meat, but who had to prepare and cook it? The four ladies of Plymouth Colony.

Turkeys and other birds had to be plucked, fish had to be cleaned, pumpkins and corn roasted, berries stewed, peas, beans and squash prepared, and beer brewed. Yes, they had a type of beer made from wild strawberries and sassafras for which the women were responsible. The founding mothers cooked for 140 people for three straight days.

What were the men doing while the women cooked? Supposedly praying. They weren't allowed sports and games. In fact, on Christmas Day of that year, Governor Bradford confiscated implements for pitching the bar and playing stool ball (early forms of cricket and baseball) because some of the men refused to work on Christmas.

The Indians, on the other hand, indulged in Lacrosse, swimming, wrestling and archery among other games. Do you think they sat around and watched the Puritans pray for three days? Not a chance. They would have kept themselves amused with their games and maybe even some dancing. I also don't think, given Governor Bradford's actions at Christmas, that all of the settlers kept their eyes on their Bibles or their minds on prayer.

Keep in mind that less than half of the settlers were Puritans or Separatists. The rest of the company were non-Separatists who just wanted to make a new life in a new country. Some of them were sent by those who had put up the money and supplies for this venture to keep an eye on their investment.

So what was really going on that first Thanksgiving? The men were drinking beer and most likely watching the Indians at their sports. Some of them might have even joined in. The women were cooking and washing the dishes and keeping an eye on the children. Are these not traditions that we keep alive to this very day?

Squanto, the Indian we all know as the one who spoke English, stayed with the Pilgrims for the Winter of 1621/22. It was Squanto who taught them how to survive in the harsh climate. But I think it's a safe bet that in all that time he never even shucked an ear of corn.

So, here's to our foremothers, those tough, dedicated women who bore hardships and privations right alongside their men (and a lot of men not even theirs). Let's not forget that without them, there would not be four million descendants of the Pilgrims alive today.

 *Patience Prence is the pen name of a descendant of Patience's third child, Hannah.

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MargaretLakeBookCover2A big thanks to Margaret Lake. She'll give away an electronic or autographed print copy of her anthology, A Walk in the Woods, which contains the novelette "Sweet Savage Charity," to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Tuesday 22 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Multiple ebook file formats are available, and no eReader is required. Delivery is available within the continental U.S. only for print.

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Did you like what you read? Learn about downloads, discounts, and special offers from Relevant History authors and Suzanne Adair. Subscribe to Suzanne's free newsletter.

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A Tudor Thanksgiving

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

PegHerringAuthorPhoto Relevant History welcomes back historical mystery author Peg Herring, who loves mystery in all its forms. Author of the critically acclaimed Simon & Elizabeth (Tudor) series as well as the contemporary Dead Detective series, Peg believes readers deserve well-crafted plots with memorable characters. She lives with her husband in northern Michigan and writes "Strong Women, Great Stories." For more information, check her web site and blog, and follow her on Facebook and Twitter.

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Thanksgiving seems to be a uniquely American tradition, but of course giving thanks is as old as mankind. The ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and many other cultures offered thanks to nature and their gods at harvest time (often in fear of reprisals if those same gods noticed them "stealing" their bounty).

The Tudor equivalent of Thanksgiving would probably be a saint's day, but the sumptuous meal served for our Thanksgiving dinners might best be compared to one of the Twelve Days of Christmas.

Advent was a time of fasting for the Tudors, so they celebrated the whole twelve days when that period ended, from December 25th to January 6th. Nobody worked who didn't have to (those who cared for animals, for example) and women put flowers on tools such as spinning wheels as a reminder that they were to be idle.

The biggest feasts were on December 25th, January 1st, and January 6th (Twelfth Night). Huge banquets were prepared for the nobility. There were sporting events for the nobles, although no games except archery could be played on December 25th. Everyone went to church, and Edward VI made a law that they had to walk there, a practice still followed by many today.

Traditional feast meat was swan, goose, or woodcock, although turkey was added almost as soon as it arrived from the New World. Venison was likely to be served as one of the twenty-four possible courses. Peacocks, roasted and then re-dressed in their feathers, were a popular addition. Salads, mince pies, puddings, pickled pigs' ears and feet, roasted boar's head, and fruitcake with prizes baked inside were big hits as well. Desserts grew more and more elaborate over time, taking on unbelievable sizes and shapes and made with sugar, which was considered a very healthy addition to a meal.

As to drink, large wooden bowls of punch were served. The punch might be ale or beer with added sugar, spices like nutmeg and ginger, and apples. The bowl would be served to the most important person, who drank and then passed it around the table, a common practice of the day.

Like our Thanksgiving, Tudor feasts were meant to be days of celebration and reflection on what God provides. And like many of us, the Tudors probably got caught up in the celebrating part and slighted the real purpose of a holiday (from the Old English "holy day"). However, they did give the leftovers from their feasts to the poor, so some good came from all that overeating and overdrinking.

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PegHerringBookCover A big thanks to Peg Herring. She'll give away an electronic or print copy of the first book of her series, Her Highness' First Murder, to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Monday 21 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Multiple ebook file formats are available, and no eReader is required. Delivery is available within the U.S. only for print.

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Did you like what you read? Learn about downloads, discounts, and special offers from Relevant History authors and Suzanne Adair. Subscribe to Suzanne's free newsletter.

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Gratitude in Rome: Ancient Roman Harvest Festivals

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonWelcome to my blog, “The British Are Coming, Y’all!” From 17–27 November, I’m participating with several hundred other bloggers in the “Gratitude Giveaways Hop,” accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We’ll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

SuzanneTyrpakAuthorPhoto Relevant History welcomes back historical suspense author Suzanne Tyrpak, who ran away from New York a long time ago to live in Colorado. Her debut novel, Vestal Virgin: Suspense in Ancient Rome, is set in Rome at the time of Nero, and Tess Gerritsen says, “Her writing is pure magic.” “Pure comedic brilliance” is how J.A. Konrath describes Suzanne’s collection of nine short stories, Dating My Vibrator. And Scott Nicholson says, “Enter this circus and let Suzanne show you why horror is the greatest show on earth” of Ghost Plane and Other Disturbing Tales. For more information, check her blog, and follow her on Facebook and Twitter.

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Ancient Romans loved to feast and they constantly offered sacrifices to the gods, perhaps more out of fear than gratitude.

One Roman holiday similar to our Thanksgiving was Meditrinalia, a mid-October harvest festival celebrating new and old wine. A favorite saying in association with the holiday was, “Wine new and old I drink, of illness new and old I am cured.” I’m sure ancient Romans drank mostly for medicinal reasons. In my novel Vestal Virgin: Suspense in Ancient Rome, there’s a description of Meditrinalia:

The streets of Rome were always lively, but during Meditrinalia people from the countryside poured into the city and city residents flooded out of doors—feasting, dancing, drinking. The revelry continued through the night, until it reached a frenzied peak, and finally fizzled out by dawn.

Whichever way Elissa turned she was met with bawdy songs and raucous dancing. Gambling was forbidden, except at festivals, and on every corner people rolled knucklebones and placed bets. Fighting her way through the mob, she crossed the Via Sacra and walked toward the Regia. The horse’s head, from that morning’s race, was mounted on the wall, proof that the aristocrats had won the competition. Flies buzzed around congealing blood. She hurried past.

Saturnalia might also have some similarities to our modern Thanksgiving, although the holiday took place near the winter solstice, officially on December 17. The festival became so popular that, by the time of Cicero, celebrations continued for a week. Known as the topsy-turvy holiday filled with merry-making, on Saturnalia wealthy citizens of Rome dressed as slaves and slaves dressed up like the aristocracy. The wealthy citizens were supposed to serve the slaves on the holiday, but that ritual might have been more show than reality.

Dedicated to Saturn the god of sowing seeds, the holiday resembles our Thanksgiving in a couple of ways: The celebration fell at the end of planting season, and it involved feasting. The festival began with a formal state sacrifice and was followed by a public feast. Several scenes in Vestal Virgin take place during Saturnalia. Here is a description of the opening sacrifice:

Blood dripped from the altar of the Temple of Saturn, pooling on the marble, soaking the priests’ robes, while a band of flute-players drowned the victims’ squawks and squeals. The Pontifex Maximus had outdone all expectations, sacrificing not only four score of sheep, six score of oxen, a hundred pigs, but black-and-white striped horses from the plains of Africa, Caspian leopards from Asia, flocks of exotic birds never before seen in Rome. Flavia’s meager sacrifice of Romulus and Remus could not compare to Nero’s spectacle.

She watched Nero, studying the way he stood, the way he spoke, looking for some glimmer of the desperate child, but he kept his weakness hidden. He stood beside the altar, crowned by a diadem studded with pearls and gemstones, Master of Saturnalia, Lord of The Roman Empire. Her brother’s murderer. More than anything, she wanted to see him grovel.

“Let the feast begin,” he proclaimed, and the crowd broke into cheers.

The plebs adored their Caesar—his charismatic smile, his penchant for spectacle. Flavia could not help admiring his power. Despite his filthy deeds and perverse ways, she felt strangely attracted to him.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! May the coming year be bountiful and filled with wonder.

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SuzanneTyrpakBookCover2 A big thanks to Suzanne Tyrpak. She’ll give away electronic copies of her December 2011 release, Agathon’s Daughter: Hetaera, to five people who contribute a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. (Agathon’s Daughter: Hetaera is book one of a suspense trilogy set in ancient Athens—the story of a slave girl who rises through society to become a courtesan, and one of the most powerful women in Athens, at the time of Pericles.) Make sure you provide your email address. I’ll choose the winners in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Sunday 20 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winners on my blog 28 November. Multiple file formats are available. No eReader required.

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Thanksgiving in History

GratitudeGiveawayHopButton Welcome to my blog, "The British Are Coming, Y'all!" From 17–27 November, I'm participating with several hundred other bloggers in the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop," accessed by clicking on the logo on the left. All blogs in this hop offer reader-appreciation giveaways, and we’re all linked, so you can easily hop from one giveaway to another. But here on my blog, I’m posting essays from Relevant History author guests on the theme of gratitude and thanksgiving. We'll give away books and gifts during the eleven days, to show appreciation for our readers. To find out how to qualify for the giveaways on my blog, read through each day’s Relevant History post below and follow the directions. Then click on the Gratitude Hop logo so you can move along to another blog. Enjoy!

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In the United States, the holidays of Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Easter, Halloween, Christmas, and even New Year's Eve have become quite commercialized. The Fourth of July and Thanksgiving focus much more on family, friends, and food. My favorite holiday is Thanksgiving. I enjoy the focus on communicating gratitude and remembering that for which we're thankful—especially in a lean economy, where people have lost homes, jobs, and health.

Historically the traditional American Thanksgiving is a "new kid on the block" when it comes to expressing gratitude. Cave paintings record the look of gratitude in human beings more than ten thousand years ago. Closer to our times, documents from Neolithic cultures confirm that city-dwellers gave thanks in annual celebrations thousands of years ago. The stuff of their festivals may seem alien to those of us in the twenty-first century, but beneath the "props" are humans appreciating the receipt of benefits and gifts.

My author friends and I are grateful for all of you, our readers. Six of us have gathered here on my blog during the Gratitude Giveaways. We'll provide you with Relevant History posts that show what Thanksgiving looked like at other times in history. Get ready for different. But remember that it's all about gratitude.

Let's prime the pump. What does thanksgiving look like to you?

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AdairRegulatedForMurderCoverLoResI'm giving away an ebook copy of my latest release, Regulated for Murder, to someone who contributes a legitimate comment on my blog today or tomorrow. Make sure you provide your email address. I'll choose the winner in a drawing from among those who comment on this post by Friday 18 November at 6 p.m. ET, then publish the name of the winner on my blog 28 November. Multiple file formats are available. No eReader required.

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Eleven Days of Gratitude: a Relevant History Book Giveaway!

In honor of Thanksgiving, I'm posting Relevant History essays, each with a gratitude and thanksgiving theme. Authors of historicals will give away books 17–27 November 2011 to show appreciation for readers.

You know the drill. Read the essay, leave a comment, get the chance to win. Readers, the place to hang out 17–27 November is here, especially if your TBR pile is running low.

GratitudeGiveawayHopButtonMy blog is one of several hundred lined up for the "Gratitude Giveaways Hop." When you click on this image from 17–27 November, you can hop to any number of other blogs on the tour. Follow the directions on each blog, and earn the opportunity to win what they’re giving away. Lots of genres, lots of prizes. You could score big by the time the blog tour hops to its completion.

Here's the author lineup:

If you enjoy historical mystery and romance, mark your calendars, then hop back to my blog for a chance to win books on this tour.

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Battle of Camden Reenactment, November 2011

This year, we were eager to attend the annual reenactment of the Battle of Camden in South Carolina at Historic Camden. My older son's musket had arrived a few weeks earlier, and he was itching to fire blackpowder. We'd missed the reenactment in 2010 because I was at the North Carolina Writers Network's annual conference teaching a workshop on creating archetypal characters. So on Saturday 5 November, we daytripped to Camden.

33rdLight01smallSaturday was windy and chilly. A cold front had moved through the day before. But the skies were clear, and the 33rd Light Company of Foot, our unit, was in good form.

I meandered through camp and said hi to everyone. Then I caught an excellent presentation by authors Sheila Ingle and Chris Swager entitled "Women of the Revolution." Sheila and Chris employed their storyteller's skills to captivate the audience with tales of the courage of Nancy Hart, Kate Moore Barry, and Martha Bratton.

ArtilleryHessians01smallHere are the Crown forces artillery and Hessians units preparing to do damage to the Continental Army. The program called the reenactment "Battle of Hobkirk's Hill Tactics." What transpired at 1:30 p.m. Saturday afternoon looked more like reenactors simply enjoying themselves and entertaining the spectators. The wind was quite brisk and made walking (and sometimes firing) a challenge. One shot the artillery fired into the wind produced a smoke ring that hung spookily in the air, then drifted back onto the cannon before dispersing. I've seen plenty of smoke rings from cannons and muskets, but I've never seen that happen before.

At the end of the battle, the 33rd Light executed a right wheel to the beat of the Hessians' drums. I captured the maneuver on video here. The wind, audible in the film, really whipped up during that time. It almost blew me off my feet, and you can see my difficulty in controlling the camera. My petticoat and cloak kept ballooning with the wind, just like sails on a ship.

Late afternoon, reenactor kids in period clothing got together for a game of Rounders. I initially assumed that Rounders was a descendent of the Ball-and-Stick game played by Native Americans. But I learned that Rounders has been played since Tudor times and is like baseball and softball. (Maybe with a dash of Fizbin thrown in.) I don't know whether American children played Rounders during the years of the Revolution, but the kids in the field last Saturday sure had a good time. This is hands-on history. It's what helps children learn and love history of all periods.

GuyfawkessmallWe stayed for the Guy Fawkes bonfire/fireworks celebration at 7:00 p.m. (This picture is the Guy from 2008.) In previous years, Crown forces reenactors stuffed the Guy with ordnance fireworks; after the Guy caught fire, there would be much excitement and laughter and dependence upon quick reflexes from the surrounding folks in greatcoats and cloaks. Also, the bonfire was built in a redoubt a short distance from the Kershaw-Cornwallis House. This year, the Hessians were encamped in the redoubt, so the bonfire was built on the battlefield. And the Guy wasn't loaded down with fireworks. But that didn't stop Crown forces reenactors from having fun, because they still had explosives fireworks. Plus they launched a number of three-foot-tall hot air balloons that looked beautiful and eerie as they floated over the subdivision to the west and were, no doubt, mistaken by residents as UFOs. After several of the hot-air balloons were aloft, Crown forces reenactors decided to gun them down with missiles Roman candles and other fireworks. Several shots came within inches of those balloons. We'll go back next year. Someone's aim will have improved, for sure.

What were the reenactors in the Continental camp doing all that time? Firing their cannon. What else could they do? It wasn't the Fourth of July.

Redcoats01smallTrain up a child in the way he should go,and he may become a redcoat. :-)

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