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This just in...
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Lee Stewart |
11-13-2019 10:23 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/dt2dKpgs/111516...46102732-1.jpg
It's no secret that turkey is a Thanksgiving staple. However, it's unlikely that it made an appearance at the first feast. Instead, the Wampanoag Indians would have brought lobsters, deer meat, clams, and eels. Coming from Europe, the pilgrims wouldn't have eaten turkey either and would have opted for duck or goose. Turkey actually wasn't popularized until the 19th century when it was recognized as an affordable source of protein that could feed a larger crowd.
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Lee Stewart |
11-13-2019 10:26 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/wB773G4s/090919-F-FF.jpg
Did you know the first-ever TV dinner came from Thanksgiving leftovers? In 1953 a worker at Swanson ordered too many frozen turkeys (260 tons too many to be exact) so a company salesman named Jerry Thomas had the idea to create a packaged dinner on aluminum trays. After an assembly line of women scooped turkey, corn-bread dressing, peas, and sweet potatoes onto the trays, the TV dinner was born!
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Lee Stewart |
11-13-2019 10:30 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/90VmP8bb/trt.jpg
Thanksgiving hasn't always taken place on the fourth Thursday in November. In 1939, FDR moved the holiday up one week to help boost retail sales during the Depression. So many people complained that it was eventually moved back to the original date in 1941. The Thanksgivings between those years are referred to as "Franksgivings" still today.
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Lee Stewart |
11-13-2019 10:34 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/wvYgHfCz/268746...rade12-img.jpg
Every year millions of Americans tune in to watch the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade, but did you know that the parade has European origins? In 1924, the store's immigrant employees decided to celebrate the beginning of the Christmas season like they would have in their European homelands—with a parade with knights, jugglers and clowns. The balloons weren't introduced until 1927.
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Lee Stewart |
11-13-2019 10:37 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/KjZb3Kcs/205576...9156726252.jpg
Millions of Americans tune in to watch football on Thanksgiving every year and it all started because the owner of the Detroit Lions wanted to promote the game in his baseball-obsessed city and convinced NBC to broadcast the game. Ever since that first NFL broadcast in 1934, the Lions have played on every Thanksgiving except during WW2. The Dallas Cowboys joined in on this NFL tradition in the 60s and America has had its post-dinner plans figured out ever since.
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Lee Stewart |
11-14-2019 07:19 AM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-14-2019 07:22 AM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-14-2019 07:27 AM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-14-2019 07:36 AM |
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