1621: A New Look at ThanksgivingCountering the prevailing, traditional story of the first Thanksgiving, with its black-hatted, silver-buckled Pilgrims; blanket-clad, be-feathered Indians; cranberry sauce; pumpkin pie; and turkey, this lushly illustrated photo-essay presents a more measured, balanced, and historically accurate version of the three-day harvest celebration in 1621. |
Other editions - View all
1621: A New Look at Thanksgiving Catherine O'Neill Grace,Margaret M. Bruchac No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
1621 harvest celebration 1621 harvest gathering 17th-century Abenaki autumn Bradford sent Brimberg and Cotton brought Tisquantum BRUCHAC Cape Cod CATHERINE O'NEILL GRACE century clam broth convert the Wampanoag Cotton Coulson culture days of thanksgiving deerskin England Standing Dish English and Wampanoag English colonists English explored feast Godey's Lady's Book green onions Hobbamock's homeland homesites hundred Wampanoag hunting King Philip's King Philip's War LOOK AT Thanksgiving Martha's Vineyard Massachusetts Bay Colony Massasoit in Plymouth Mayflower meal Metacom musket Nantucket NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Native communities oral histories Patuxet Pequot PHOTOGRAPHS BY SISSE PLANTATION WITH PETER Plimoth Plantation staff Plymouth Colony pniese Pokanoket Program at Plimoth reenact the 1621 Rhode Island sachems Samoset Sarah Josepha Hale settlement Sisse Brimberg sold into slavery Special days Thanksgiving Day three days traditional Wampanoag had lost Wampanoag Indian Program WAMPANOAG LANGUAGE WAMPANOAG MEN built Wampanoag Nation Wampanoag territory Wampanoag village Wampanoag word William Bradford Wôpanâak