Thanksgiving & Sarah Hale – Great History Lesson

Writer & Mom Worked to Make Thanksgiving National Holiday

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Sarah Hale Worked to Make Thanksgiving Holiday - Chambers
Sarah Hale Worked to Make Thanksgiving Holiday - Chambers
Teach kids about how Thanksgiving came to be a national holiday due to a tireless letter-writing campaign of a widow with five children.

When thinking about Thanksgiving, many people think of food, cornucopias, a vacation from work, parades, autumn weather, or perhaps a service project. Few would readily think of the name Sarah Hale, but the United States may have lost Thanksgiving as a holiday altogether if it had not been for the tireless efforts of Sarah Josepha Buell Hale.

Sarah Hale – a Progressive Woman of Her Day

Born on October 24, 1788, Sarah Hale became a famous writer and magazine editor after her husband’s untimely death from pneumonia. After his death, she wore black dresses until she died at the age of 90. Despite raising five children, the youngest of whom was not yet born when her husband died, Sarah sought to advocate for women while encouraging:

  • Educational opportunities for girls and women
  • Opportunities for women to become doctors and teachers
  • Safer work environments for women

She mainly accomplished her goals with the use of pen and paper. Perhaps her most famous literary work, Mary Had a Little Lamb, became a well-known nursery rhyme that many children in America know today. She also wrote a novel and poetry while her children slept at night. She worked for two magazines, Ladies’ Magazine and later Godey’s Lady’s Book and published many famous authors, including:

  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Charles Dickens

Sarah Hale’s Letter-Writing Campaign to Make Thanksgiving a National Holiday

Sarah Hale was an avid writer and influential not only with the women of her day but with many of the lawmakers. Sarah noticed that many parts of the United States were no longer celebrating Thanksgiving, and she began writing thousands of letters in support of making Thanksgiving not only a state holiday but later a national holiday. She also asked for help from the readership of her magazines, and many of those women also responded with supportive letters.

Although many states began to recognize Thanksgiving as a holiday, Sarah Hale decided to write the President of the United States with her idea to make Thanksgiving a national holiday on the fourth Thursday in November, which was the date chosen by President George Washington. Her idea was not met with immediate enthusiasm. Many presidents who received her letters disagreed with the idea, including:

  • Zachary Taylor
  • Millard Fillmore
  • Franklin Pierce
  • James Buchanan

With each new president, Sarah would again write her plea to make Thanksgiving nationally official. Finally, in 1863, after writing letters for 38 years, President Abraham Lincoln agreed to make Thanksgiving a national holiday. The woman who firmly believed in upholding traditional values in America could finally enjoy celebrating Thanksgiving as a national holiday.

Teaching Children the Power of the Pen and Perseverance at Thanksgiving

Sarah Hale dedicated much of her life toward helping improve educational and working conditions for women despite being a busy widow with five young children. In a day before email and faxes, Sarah Hale showed the power of her pen and perseverance as she worked for 38 years to ensure that America’s day of thanks would not be forgotten after Abraham Lincoln agreed to make Thanksgiving a national holiday.

The children’s picture book Thank You, Sarah: The Woman Who Saved Thanksgiving [2002, Simon & Schuster, ISBN: 0-689-84787-4] is a 38-page picture book that served as a source for this article and would make an excellent resource for teaching children about the history of how Thanksgiving became a national holiday in the United States.

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Why is the American Flag Called Old Glory? gives background information on this interesting nickname for the United States flag.

Katrena Wells, Photo by Cyndi Allison, All Rights Reserved

Katrena Wells - Katrena Wells is a RN in NC with 17 1/2 years of experience in oncology, an educator since 1995, and has taught exercise classes since ...

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Nov 15, 2011 8:09 PM
Guest :
After various occurrences such as winning a battle, a good rain, or a good harvest the settlers would have a thanksgiving feast, without relating it to any other. The feasts and days of prayer were symbolic of their beliefs and specific to the event they were thankful for. In 1775 the American Revolution broke out. By 1777 the Second Continental Congress ordered a day of thanksgiving and prayer for the quick American victory. In both 1789 and 1795, George Washington declared “a day of public thanksgiving and prayer” each to sanctify a specific accomplishment of the new government and country. Though the tradition of having a thanksgiving celebration continued, it did not continue in remembrance of a ‘first Thanksgiving’. Every state, each family or congregation would hold thanksgiving or harvest feasts at arbitrary times throughout the year to observe an occasion they felt was especially significant.

Sarah Hale had the optimistic spirit of a warrior. Through her family hardships she looked forward to find ways to create a better existence for herself and her children. She used the power of her pen and over a 38 year campaign and lobbied for a national day of Thanksgiving. Sarah Hale wanted the country to celebrate a day of thanks together. She enjoyed the many celebrations but felt that having one day that the entire country celebrated together would generate a feeling of awareness and consolidation as an American people. Though four other presidents denied her plea, President Lincoln finally agreed to her request as the Civil War raged on. He hoped that a national holiday of thanksgiving would help “bring union” to a divided country. At Sarah Hale’s request, in keeping with George Washington’s first national day of thanks, Lincoln charged that the fourth Thursday in November would be set aside for a National day of Thanksgiving from then forward. The holiday was not in remembrance of the Plymouth Old Comers but in hopes that a unified day of thanks would help heal a nation in torment. Lincoln’s proclamation entreated all Americans to ask God to “commend to his tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife” and to “heal the wounds of the nation”. It’s important to dispel the myths that we pass on. Sarah didn’t ‘save’ Thanksgiving, she consolidated assorted celebrations into one national celebration for the purpose of national unification that she began long before the Civil War began. American Indians weren’t even considered as part of the Thanksgiving celebration until promotional propaganda i.e. the icon of a ‘first thanksgiving’ began in the 1890’s, nearly 30 years after it officially became a holiday.
Nov 19, 2011 4:14 AM
Katrena Wells :
Thank you very much for taking the time to read my article about Sarah Hale's role in making Thanksgiving a national holiday in the United States and for posting your quite article insight!
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