OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2016 Being thankful: An American tradition Gratitude travels across the centuries and miles By MATT WINTERS EO Media Group A mericans used to know how fortunate we are. If we entered winter with well- stocked larders, that was ample reason to be relieved and grateful. Abundance is far from guaranteed. There is ever so much that can go wrong on a farm and on a planet. The Thanksgiving feast celebrated in Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621 is a pol- ished centerpiece of American folklore, mark- ing the pilgrims’ first New World harvest. Only a year before, the Mayflower’s passen- gers and crew arrived on “a faire sunshining day” and “gave God thanks for his mercies, in their manifould deliverances,” Gov. William Bradford reported. Thinking of images from old bank cal- endars, we imagine laughter and sharing between pilgrims and Indians seated at a long table. Maybe, in some ways, it was a jolly time. It also was deadly serious spiritual busi- ness — a fervent prayer for a kinder fate as another bitter New England winter began to scheme renewed attacks. After all, nearly half of the 102 colonists died in the settlement’s first awful months. The mourning survivors would have absolutely dreaded that approach- ing second winter — thankful to be alive and savoring the successes of the growing sea- son, but anxious to be on the right side of an Almighty they might all too soon be meeting in person. “Boy Life on the Prairie” from 1899 is a stirring remembrance of simpler times when we lived closer to the land and bet- ter understood the fragility of prosperity. National well-being With the advantage of almost 400 years of hindsight, we know things eventually worked out pretty well. The path to national well-be- ing was never, however, without peril. After skipping a year, in some ways the second Thanksgiving observance in 1623 may have been an even more fervent and sincere expression of relief. Our ancestors — it’s been estimated at least 35 million living Ameri- cans are direct descendants of Mayflower pas- sengers — offered grateful prayers after yet another close call. They credited religious fasting for breaking an early summer drought that threatened starvation. Bradford recalled: “They sett a parte a solemne day of humil- iation, to seek the Lord by humble and fer- vente prayer, in this great distresse. And he was pleased to give them a gracious and speedy answer … toward evening it begane to overcast, and shortly after to raine, with such sweete and gentle showers, as gave them cause of rejoyceing, and blesing God. … the earth was thorowly wete and soked therwith. Which did so apparently revive and quicken the decayed corne and other fruits, as was wonderfull to see… For shich mercie (in time conveniente) they also sett aparte a day of thanksgiving.” Imagine a parent’s vast relief: My child will not die of hunger this winter. Thank you — thanks everlasting. Winters Family Photo Raising turkeys is a family tradition. Above, Greg Winters with one of his grandpar- ents’ gobblers in about 1956. He went on to raise turkeys of his own, including one named George Bush that he could never bring himself to slaughter, despite politics. Depression and gratitude Thanks in the USA President George Washington first pro- claimed a national day of thanks in 1789 in his first year in office. (It didn’t become an officially sanctioned annual observance until the Civil War era, when Abraham Lincoln gave it his blessing. Until the 1850s, it was regarded as a regional event limited to the New England states, derided by some South- erners as Pilgrim Christmas. Of course, they eventually embraced the idea — who doesn’t love a feast? Washington’s most eloquent Thanksgiving proclamation — declaring a holiday for Feb. 19, 1795 — came near the end of his time in office: “When we review the calamities, which afflict so many other nations, the present condition of the United States affords much matter of consolation and satisfaction. Our exemption hitherto from foreign war; an increasing prospect of the continuance of that exemption; the great degree of internal tran- quility we have enjoyed; the recent confirma- tion of that tranquility by the suppression of an insurrection which so wantonly threatened it; the happy course of public affairs in gen- eral; the unexampled prosperity of all classes of our citizens; are circumstances which pecu- liarly mark our situation with indications of the Divine beneficence towards us. In such a state of things it is, in an especial manner, our duty as people, with devout reverence and affectionate gratitude, to acknowledge our many and great obligations to Almighty God and to implore Him to continue and confirm the blessings we experience.” Washington expressed his immediate hopes for the young nation, along with wise words for the distant future: We should “humbly and fervently to beseech the kind Author of these blessings, graciously to prolong them to us; to imprint on our hearts a deep and solemn sense of our obligations to Him for them; to teach us rightly to estimate their immense value; to preserve us from the arrogance of prosperity and from hazarding the advantages we enjoy by delu- sive pursuits; to dispose us to merit the con- in the immediate aftermath of World War I. So many farmers eventually raised them that prices tanked and turkey became a common- place meal for copper miners in the nearby Rockies. To help preserve a thought of her parents’ farming hardships and triumphs, 50 years ago my elegant Grandaunt Lillian sent me a copy of Hamlin Garland’s semi-autobiographical novel “Boy Life on the Prairie”: “There were days when the ragged gray masses of cloud swept down on the powerful northern wind, when a sorrowful, lonesome moan was heard among the corn rows, when the cranes, no longer soaring at ease, drove straight into the south, sprawling low-hung in the blast, their necks out-thrust, desperately eager to catch a glimpse of the shining Mexi- can seas toward which they fled. “On Thanksgiving Day, Mr. Stewart, being apprehensive of snow, hired some extra hands and got out into the field as soon as it was light enough to see the rows. … “Oh, how they longed for noon! Though he could not afford a holiday, Mr. Stewart had provided turkey and cranberry sauce, and the men talked about it with increasing wistful- ness as the day broadened. … “The hour of release came at last, and the boys were free to ‘scud for the house.’ Once within, they yanked off their ragged caps, threw their wet mittens under the stove, washed their chafed hands and chapped fin- gers in warm water, and curled up beside the stove, their mouths watering for the turkey — ‘all eyes and stummick.’ … “Once at the table they ate until their father said, ‘Boys, you must ‘a been holler clear to your heels.’” Wikimedia Commons Proclamation by George Washington that urges Americans to publicly observe Thanksgiving Day on Thursday, Feb. 19, 1795. tinuance of His favors by not abusing them, by our gratitude for them, and by a correspon- dent conduct as citizens and as men; to ren- der this country, more and more, a propitious asylum for the unfortunate of other countries; to extend among us true and useful knowl- edge; to diffuse and establish habits of sobri- ety, order, morality, and piety; and, finally, to impart all blessings we possess or ask for our- selves, to the whole family of mankind.” Preservation from “the arrogance of pros- perity,” serving as “a propitious asylum for the unfortunate of other countries,” and hon- oring “habits of sobriety, order, morality, and piety” — these all are aspirations that all deserve to be ingrained in our lives today. Strongly grounded in morality and having staked his life and honor on the attainment of national freedom, Washington knew we are never more than a bad harvest or two away from utter calamity. His America was one that didn’t take good times for granted. It would be fascinating — perhaps shocking — to hear what Washington would say about his nation today. Turkey day in Montana Like many other farmers in and around Roundup, Montana, my great-grandparents, Tom and Elizabeth Bell, turned to turkeys as a cash crop in 1919 as drought ravaged their wheat fields and commodity prices crashed During the Great Depression, my grand- parents revived turkey husbandry as one of their own survival strategies. Until butchering week, it mostly was all Grandma’s job. She’d feed, protect and defend six or eight hens and a gobbler through west- ern Wyoming’s Siberian winter while every predator in a 10-mile radius circled the ranch waiting for the sentry to let down her guard. “Your grandma would fret over her tur- key hens,” my uncle, their eldest son, recalled. And she was a crack riflewoman. Come spring, or what passes for it in the mountains, these hens with wild strains still dancing in their genes would try slipping away to make renegade nests in the willows or roughs, Easter treats for every passing coyote and bull snake. My mom remembered seeing one giant old snake in the pasture with four or five turkey eggs bloating his ribcage, looking like a bizarre multi-knobbed barbell. Called jakes and jennys, those young tur- keys that didn’t naively wander off into wait- ing jaws or irrigation ditches were pampered along until November. After brief, but con- tented, lives of chasing grasshoppers, squab- bling over victuals and vying for grandma’s attention, in the end 30 to 50 mature 10-15 pound birds were ready for butchering. All the small-time ranchers in the vicinity would trade visits to help each other out with this daunting and gory project. Grandpa loaded up his wagon shortly before the holiday. He and my uncle set off for the scales in our little town, as the train waiting to take them east gathered steam at the depot. There were wagonloads of turkeys all up and down the street. Anxious men waited to get a check for real silver money. An excited, hard- working boy might get a dime to buy candy at the drugstore. And “Mom squirreled away what she could for what few presents we got,” my uncle said. And there was still one turkey destined for our family’s own Thanksgiving — the best bird in the world — according to two skinny old kids who always honored their parents’ sacrifices and love across the gulf of all the long years. We honor them still, and give thanks. Matt Winters is editor and publisher of the Chinook Observer and Coast River Business Journal. He lives in Ilwaco, Washington. DAVID F. PERO, Editor & Publisher Founded in 1873 • LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager • CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager • DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager