Pardon a Turkey 7 Thanksgiving Traditions Explained

ByTiaGhose, Senior Writer| November 20, 2012 01:08pm ET

Thanksgiving — time to carve up a turkey, unbutton your pants, and

watch football with the family. While families may have their own rituals, many

Turkey Day customs have deep roots in American history.

From turkey pardoning to the first feast, here are the origins of

seven of the holiday's most iconic traditions.

First feast

Most have heard the story: Pilgrims arrive at Plymouth

Rock in 1621, nearly starve, are taught to farm by the locals, and after

the first harvest, everyone has a gratitude-filled meal to celebrate. But

settlers may have celebrated the first Thanksgiving farther south — at least if

Texans have their say. Residents of San Elizario, Texas, claim the first

Thanksgiving feast was celebrated in 1598 by Spanish explorer Juan de Oñate.

After he and 500 fellow travelers survived a treacherous crossing through the

Chihuahuan Desert in Mexico, the thirsty travelers gulped down water from the

Rio Grande and devoured a Thanksgiving feast of fish and wild game to

celebrate. America's first Thanksgiving feast may have even older roots still:

Spanish admiral Pedro Menendes de Aviles is said to have celebrated the first

Thanksgiving feast with 500 soldiers and hundreds of the local Timucuan Indians

in 1565 in St. Augustine, Florida.

Turkey pardon

Every year, the president frees one lucky turkey while millions ofits brethren are consigned to the dinner table. Though turkey farmers have beensending presidents the choicest birds since the 1800s, President John F.Kennedy was the first one on record to spare a turkey. In 1963, he sent back aturkey mailed by the National Turkey Federation, saying, "We'll just letthis one grow." President Richard Nixon sent turkeys to a Washington,D.C., petting farm but didn't officially pardon them, according to the WhiteHouse Blog. President George H.W. Bush gave the first official pardon to aturkey in 1989. The survivor lived out its days at a Virginia petting zoocalled Frying Pan Park.

Official holiday

While Thanksgiving festivals were informally celebrated throughout

the 1600s, they didn't become an annual event until the 1700s, when each state

set aside a different day for the holiday. By 1775, George Washington, then

commander-in-chief of the Continental Army, declared the first national

celebration of Thanksgiving, and he issued a Thanksgiving

Day proclamation in 1789. But the holiday didn't get a fixed date until

1863, when President Abraham Lincoln set aside the last Thursday in

November for the day of thanks.

Turkey … and seafood?

Turkey Day should probably be called Surf 'n Turf Day if the

historical celebration is any guide. Turkey may have been present at the first

Thanksgiving but it definitely was not the centerpiece of the meal — that honor

would have gone to deer meat brought by the Wampanoag Indians. While wild

turkeys did roam the area, pilgrims probably preferred duck and goose. The

first settlers' Thanksgiving also likely included a cornucopia from the sea,

including lobsters, clams, mussels and even eels. Sweet potatoes and cranberry

sauce probably weren't on the menu and probably didn't make it to the

Thanksgiving table for at least another 50 years.

Macy's parade

After a day of gorging, many Americans sit down to watch

the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade. This annual tradition didn't get started

until 1924, when Macy's employees held a Christmas parade filled with knights,

clowns and jugglers. The 6-mile (9.7-kilometer)-long parade attracted a crowd

of 250,000 viewers, and the department store decided to hold it every year. The

first balloon, Felix the Cat, floated above the parade in 1927. Mickey Mouse

didn't make his appearance until 1934.

Pigskin holiday

Another family pastime is Thanksgiving football, which has its

roots in the Great Depression. After the Portsmouth Spartans moved to Detroit

in 1930, the team's owner knew he had to do something to draw football fans to

the new team. In 1934, he arranged a match between the Spartans (renamed the

Lions) and the world champions, the Chicago Bears. Though the Spartans lost, a

Thanksgiving tradition was born: The game sold out two weeks in advance, and

the event became such a hit that it was repeated the year after. This time, the

Lions prevailed.

Hybrid meats

The first settlers may have stuffed themselves with a range of

meats at the dinner table, but the turducken is a fairly recent invention. A

chicken stuffed inside a duck stuffed inside a turkey, the turducken has taken

its place in the canon of over-the-top, calorie-laden Thanksgiving dishes.

The dish first appeared in central Louisiana meat shops sometime between the

late 1970s and early 1980s and was popularized by Cajun chef Paul Prudhomme.

But the tradition of stuffing birds inside of other birds like Russian dolls

may have even older roots: French foodie Grimod de la Reynière first described

the rôti sans pareil (roast without equal) in L'Almanac des Gourmands between

1803 and 1812. The dish packs 17 birds inside one another, from a tiny warbler

all the way up to a giant bird called a bustard.

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