Thanksgiving was moved up for one because merchants wanted an extra week of selling time before the official Christmas shopping began. The president who moved the Thanksgiving holiday was Franklin Roosevelt.
Thanksgiving has no religious significance and no one religion.
You are probably referring to his October 3, 1863 proclamation which made Thanksgiving a national holiday. Prior to that, states commemorated it at different times. Journalist and women's magazine editor Sara Josepha Hale was among those who had been strongly advocating for one specific day to be set aside nationally for a Thanksgiving observance, and her view had been gathering momentum. Then, in late 1863, President Lincoln made the national observance of Thanksgiving official.
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The town of Shamrock invented Thanksgiving. One day Thomas Shambree said thank you to everyone in his town and arranged a special dinner. They had peas, mashed potatoes, gravy, and the main course turkey. They did it hte next year, and the next and soon named it Thanksgiving.
They asked Franklin Roosevelt to make Thanksgiving one week earlier. President Roosevelt ignored those concerns in 1933, but when Thanksgiving once again threatened to fall on the last day of November in 1939, FDR reconsidered the request and moved the date of Thanksgiving up one week. THANK YOU FOR ANSWERING MY QUESTION
In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt decided to move Thanksgiving back one week to boost retail sales before Christmas in light of the Great Depression.The public did not like this decision and therefore some started calling the holiday Franksgiving (a combination of Franklin and Thanksgiving).
FDR.In 1939, 1940, and 1941 Franklin D. Roosevelt, seeking to lengthen the Christmas shopping season, proclaimed Thanksgiving the third Thursday in November. Controversy followed, and Congress passed a joint resolution in 1941 decreeing that Thanksgiving should fall on the fourth Thursday of November, where it remains.Clarification: In 1863, Abraham Lincoln declared Thanksgiving to be the last Thursday in November. Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1939, at the prompting of retailers who were concerned that Thanksgiving falling on November 30 would affect the amount that shoppers spent so wanted it moved one week earlier, declared Thanksgiving to be November 23, which was the fourth Thursday in November, not the third. In 1940, Roosevelt again moved Thanksgiving one week earlier - to the third Thursday in November, instead of the last (and, in this case, the fourth) Thursday.
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In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt decided to move Thanksgiving back one week to boost retail sales before Christmas in light of the Great Depression.The public did not like this decision and therefore some started calling the holiday Franksgiving (a combination of Franklin and Thanksgiving).
== Harrison died in a month == William Henry Harrison was the ninth president of the United States, and the first president to die in office, one month after becoming President. No American president died after just one week in office.
The colonies didn't have Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving was created in 1860 by Lincoln. The people of the colonies did have a Harvest dinner and some religions (Pilgrims are one) of the time began the week with a fast. At the end of the week was a big dinner and this would become Thanksgiving. Depending on the area where they lived they could have wild game, various fruits and vegetables, breads and pies, and fish.
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Sarah Polk is credited with having the first one at the White house.
The first Thanksgiving was on Thursday, November 26, 1789, and the second Thanksgiving was on Thursday, February 19, 1795. In 1863, President Lincoln proclaimed that Thanksgiving Day be observed every year on the last Thursday of November, which is the Thursday after Nov. 23 and before Dec. 1. From 1863 through 1938, there were only two years in which Thanksgiving was not observed on the last Thursday of November. In 1939 and 1940, during the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt made Thanksgiving the third Thursday of November (Nov. 16, 1939 and Nov. 21, 1940) in the hopes of boosting the economy by making the Christmas shopping season longer. So many people were against the change that Congress passed a bill in 1941 which, as a compromise, made Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday of November, which is the Thursday after Nov. 21 and before Nov. 29. President Roosevelt signed it into law on Friday, December 26, 1941.
He changed it from the LAST Thursday to the fourth Thursday in 1939. That really upset a lot of publishers who already had calendars printed showing Thanksgiving on November 30. Retailers were happy because they got an extra week for Christmas sales. From 1863 when Lincoln declared the first National Thanksgiving Day, it was not a national holiday until declared by the President each year. But it had always been the Last Thursday in November. In 1940 and 1941 Roosevelt also declared Thanksgiving on the second-to-last Thursday (I didn't save those calendars, but I think that would have made it on the 21st and 20th). Then in December of 1941 Congress passed legislation setting the date to be the fourth Thursday for all future years.
The first proclamation was issued by George Washington during his first year as President. It sets aside Thursday, November 26 as "A Day of Publick(sic) Thanksgiving and Prayer." Signed by Washington on October 3, 1789 and entitled "General Thanksgiving,"On October 3, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation calling for the observance of the fourth Tuesday of November as a national holiday.In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the holiday to the third Thursday of November (to extend the Christmas shopping season and boost the economy). After a storm of protest, Roosevelt changed the holiday again in 1941 to the fourth Thursday in November, where it stands today.