The true origins of Thanksgiving are still widely debated, but historians believe the first form of the holiday likely took place in 1621 in Plymouth Colony (now in modern-day Massachusetts).
In the decade following America’s independence and foundation, the first Federal Congress asked the President to name a national day of thanks. So President George Washington did—proclaiming that Thursday, Nov. 26, 1789 was a “Day of Publick Thanksgivin.”
But here in Michigan, we were a bit late to the party.
According to Donald L. Wilcox, curator of books at the University of Michigan Clements Library, Michigan can trace its Thanksgiving roots to the early 1800s. It was a time beset by tragedy for our young territory.
In 1805—just months after Michigan had become a territory—a great fire ravaged Detroit. Since the city lacked a professional fire department, residents raced to the Detroit River with buckets to fight the flames. Almost everything in the city was destroyed.
Just a few years later, Michigan was the scene of the
Battle of the River Raisin—it would prove to be one of the single deadliest battles for Americans during the War of 1812.
Although the situation seemed dire for the territory, things would begin picking up in the following years.
Lewis Cass was appointed Governor of Michigan in 1813, infrastructure began improving, and the population saw a big boost throughout the next decade. In 1826, Michigan became a “second stage” territory, giving Michiganders the power to elect a territorial council and a non-voting delegate to Congress.
Following these big wins, on Nov. 4, 1829, Cass issued a proclamation marking Nov. 26 as a “day of public thanksgiving and prayer.” The proclamation was printed in the Detroit Gazette for all to see—several commemorative broadsides were also printed on satin. Fun fact: several copies of the original broadside are still in existence, including one you can find at the University of Michigan’s Clements Library.
By the way—presidents who came after George Washington issued their own Thanksgiving proclamations, but the day and month varied. Thanksgiving was formally adopted as a federal holiday in 1941, to take place yearly on the fourth Thursday of November.
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