The nation’s first Thanksgiving
took place in December 1621 as the religious separatist Pilgrims held
a three-day feast to celebrate the bountiful harvest they reaped following
their first winter in North America. The day did not become a national
holiday until 1863 when President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last
Thursday of November as a national day of Thanksgiving. Over the next
75 years, presidents annually followed Lincoln’s example. In his
Thanksgiving proclamation of 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt clarified
that the holiday should henceforth be celebrated on the fourth Thursday,
not the last, to encourage earlier holiday shopping. In 1941, Congress
made this change permanent.
269 million
The preliminary estimate of the number of turkeys raised in the United
States in 2003 — nearly one for every U.S. resident. That’s
down 1 percent from 2002. The turkeys produced in 2002 weighed 7.4 billion
pounds (370,000 tons) altogether and were valued at $2.7 billion. <http://www.usda.gov/nass/>
109 million
Number of occupied housing units across the nation — all potential
gathering places for people to celebrate the holiday. <http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/hh-fam/tabHH-1.pdf>
Where Those Mounds of Food Come From
45.5 million
The number of turkeys Minnesota expects to raise in 2003. North Carolina
produces a nearly identical total (45.0 million birds), making the Gopher
and Tar Heel states the top two in turkey production. They are followed
by Missouri (27.5 million), Arkansas (24.0 million), Virginia (23.0 million)
and California (16.5 million). These six states are expected to account
for about 2 of every 3 U. S. turkeys in 2003. <http://www.usda.gov/nass/>
583 million pounds
The forecast weight of U.S. cranberry production in 2003, up 3 percent
from 2002. Wisconsin leads all states in the production of cranberries,
with 305 million pounds, followed by Massachusetts (170 million), New
Jersey (47 million), Oregon (44 million) and Washington (17 million).
<http://www.usda.gov/nass/>
1.3 billion pounds
The weight of sweet potatoes — another popular Thanksgiving staple
— produced in the United States in 2002. North Carolina (481 million
pounds) produced more sweet potatoes than any other state. It was followed
by California (276 million), Mississippi (197 million) and Louisiana (188
million). <http://www.usda.gov/nass/>
791 million pounds
Total U.S. pumpkin production in 2002. Illinois, with a production of
299 million pounds, led the country. There also were big pumpkin patches
in California (with a production of 150 million lbs.), Pennsylvania (117
million) and New York (107 million). Pumpkin pie is a popular dessert
at Thanksgiving. <http://www.usda.gov/nass/>
$10.5 million
The value of U.S. imports of live turkeys between January and August 2003
— all from Canada. Our northern neighbors also accounted for most
($250,000 worth) of the cranberries the United States imported; Sweden
accounted for the rest: $61,000. When it came to sweet potatoes, however,
the Dominican Republic was the source of most ($1.5 million) of the total
imports ($1.6 million). During this period, the United States ran a $4.2
million trade deficit in live turkeys, but had $3.3 million cranberry
and $10.7 million sweet potato surpluses. <http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/www/>
13.8 pounds
Amount of turkey consumed by the typical American annually and, if tradition
be true, a good bit of it at Thanksgiving time. Per capita turkey consumption
is virtually the same as in 1990 (13.8 pounds), but 70 percent higher
than in 1980 (8.1 pounds). On the other hand, annual per capita sweet
potato consumption is 4.3 pounds, down slightly from 1990 (4.6 pounds)
but the same as 1980 (4.4 pounds). (Source: the soon-to-be-released Statistical
Abstract of the United States: 2003.)
The Price is Right
99
Cost per pound, in pennies, that is, of a frozen whole turkey in December
2002. (Source: the soon-to-be-released Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 2003.)
Where to Feast
3
Number of places nationwide named after the holiday’s traditional
main entree. Turkey, Texas, was the most populous in 2002, with 482 residents;
followed by Turkey Creek, La. (361); and Turkey, N.C. (264). There also
are 11 townships around the country named “Turkey,” three
of them in Kansas.
<http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-106.html>
<http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/BasicFactsServlet>
8
Number of places and townships in the United States that are named “Cranberry”
or some variation of the name for the red, acidic berry (e.g., Cranbury,
N.J.). <http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/BasicFactsServlet>
20
Number of places in the United States named Plymouth, as in “Plymouth
Rock,” legendary location of the first Thanksgiving. Plymouth, Minn.,
is the most populous, with 67,304 residents in 2002; Plymouth, Mass.,
had 53,789. Speaking of Plymouth Rock, there is a single township in the
United States named “Pilgrim.” Located in Dade County, Mo.,
its population is 135.
<http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2003/cb03-106.html>
<http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/BasicFactsServlet>
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