The Fall is coming on us quickly, and while getting ready stacking wood and thinking of our next museum event, " Fall Festival History Weekend" followed by our November Pie Sale...I dug this up and thought you might enjoy reading it again!
Many of our original settlers in Eaton date back to the Mayflower and the settlers of Natick especially the Morse, Leland, Kent and Stowe families. Eaton followed much of the tradition of Natick so I thought I would include some wonderful history on Thanksgiving and Governor Bradford who Grandma Clark was a direct relative of.
The first Thanksgiving was truly different
from what we see portrayed today on TV and in the movies. In actuality, the Pilgrims who had invited
the Indians over to thank them for their help in cultivating corn, in fishing
and in hunting, and for basically keeping them alive for the first year, were
stunned when the Indians arrived for the feast in numbers far beyond what the
Pilgrim’s could feed. So, the Indians
left and hunted for deer and fowl and returned with the food necessary for the
feast to last three days…yes, three days.
This occasion was unusually frivolous for
the stern Pilgrims and comprised of continuous eating, the marching of Myles
Standish’s little band of soldiers, bow and arrow competition etc… The feast meanwhile was tended to by five of
the eighteen women who survived the first terrible winter. Imagine trying to fix a feast for 140-150
people over an open fire, and then stretch it to three days.
The great Governor Bradford delivered this
prayer on the first Thanksgiving and I thought I would include it for us:
Oh give thanks unto the Lord; sing unto
him; sing praises unto him, for the precious things of heaven for the dew, and
for the deep that couches beneath, and for the precious fruits brought forth
from the sun, and for the precious things put forth by the moon, and for the
chief things of the ancient mountains, and for the precious things of the
everlasting hills, and for the precious things of the earth and its
fullness. Let everything that has breath
praise the Lord, Praise ye the Lord.
Of interest, I think, are a number of
passages from “Of Plimouth Plantation” by Governor Bradford, which mention the
colony’s success only by acts of what he referred to as “God’s divine
providence”.
Bradford mentions windfalls of corn from
unexpected quarters, a mysterious voice that warned the colonials of a
store-house fire, showers that came just in time to save the crops, even the
turning back of a ship that would foreclose on the colony. These quotes show the success of the colony having
been squarely laid on the cornerstone of faith.
This faith led Bradford to guide the
colony through all of its terrible trials and gave him the moral capacity to do
what was right for all without wish for personal gain. From his first election in 1622 until 1639,
he received nothing for dining the court during their monthly sessions. One comment I received after the piece on the
“Common Good” read “too bad things could not be like that today!” To this I say, “Amen!” The word “altruism” is too seldom used to
describe our modern leaders.
The key word in our pursuit of the history
of the Pilgrim’s is DEMOCRACY. Democracy, is the basis for the Pilgrim’s
government, carried through both the church and the state, something we need to
concentrate on today I think.
Fall Festival will be the first weekend in October and will close for the season at the end of the month.
Fall Festival will be the first weekend in October and will close for the season at the end of the month.
The Morse House today and before!
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