Maurizio Valsania writing for The Conversation:
On
Thursday, Nov. 26, 1789, George Washington woke early. Assisted by his enslaved
valets – William
“Billy” Lee and the young Christopher
Sheels – he powdered his hair, put on his favorite black velvet suit,
tied his white neckwear and donned his yellow gloves.
Finally
ready, he set out to travel the short distance from the President’s House, at
what used to be 3
Cherry St., New York, and St. Paul’s Chapel, which still stands at 209 Broadway.
He had an
important aim that day: to celebrate Thanksgiving. Washington had thought
carefully about this Thanksgiving, the first of his presidency. On Oct. 3,
1789, following the recommendation of a joint committee of the Senate and House
of Representatives, Washington had issued a proclamation.
He urged the people of the United States to celebrate “a day of public
thanksgiving and prayer.”
But
Washington believed that particular Thanksgiving in 1789 was a crucial
occasion. He would use it to call on the people he now led to hold their new
country together in the face of forces that he knew could pull it apart.
Devotion
in the service of unity
It was not
the first Thanksgiving Americans celebrated. The first took
place at Plymouth colony in the autumn of 1621 – Pilgrims held a feast to thank
God for their first harvest and invited members of the neighboring Wampanoag
tribe.
It was not
even the first national Thanksgiving – which was held on Dec.
18, 1777, at then-General Washington’s behest. Nor was Thanksgiving yet a
federal holiday to be observed every last Thursday of November – it became so
with the 1863
proclamation of President Abraham Lincoln.
Nov. 26,
1789, was a Thursday, and the weather was miserable. Few New Yorkers showed up
at St. Paul’s Chapel to see the president: “I
went to St. Pauls Chapel,” Washington wrote in his diary, “though it was
most inclement and stormy.” There were “but few people at Church.”
The
president had prepared for the occasion. He also contributed a sizable sum of
his own money to buy beer and food for prisoners confined for debt in the New
York City jail. The donation was deemed to be a magnanimous and moving gesture,
suitable to the spirit of the holiday. A week later, in an advertisement in
the Dec. 3 issue of
the New York Journal, those very prisoners returned their “grateful thanks”
to their president “for his very acceptable donation on Thursday last.”
Washington’s
first Thanksgiving as a president may have not been tremendously successful,
given the scarce attendance at the church service.
Yet, as a
scholar writing a biography about Washington, I believe it was an important
step in his much larger political plan to bring the executive branch to the
people’s doorstep.
What
Washington wanted was a virtuous kind of populism in the new country he led.
Washington’s populism wasn’t about inciting an angry mob; it was about sharing
in their rituals, worshiping their God, speaking their own language. And he did
so in the sole interest of the American people.
Thanksgiving
1789, for Washington, was at once religious and more than religious.
Washington’s proclamation invoked devotional language, literally. The upcoming
festivity, in his
words, could “be devoted by the People of these States to the service of
that great and glorious Being, who is the beneficent Author of all the good
that was, that is, or that will be.”
But
Washington’s main concern was political. The nation was recently formed, and he
feared that it could easily collapse. Its many internal divisions and separate
interests could be lethal. Consequently, the president wanted this holiday to
be a civic celebration in which “we may then all unite.”
‘Pardon
our national…transgressions’
As its
first president, Washington recognized that the United States was born out of
slavery, conquest and violence as much as of sacred principle. Civic
unification required acknowledgment of these flaws. Thus, in the proclamation,
Washington asked God “to pardon our national and other transgressions.”
A tremendously self-aware man,
Washington knew that he was a deeply flawed person himself.
He was a
slave owner, a relentless pursuer of African American fugitives and a destroyer
of Native American villages. He was also a warrior who deployed brutality
against enemies. He was a commander who resorted to corporal punishment with
his own soldiers. Washington believed that he was not a saint to be mindlessly
imitated. This made him humble in his duties.
More
importantly, Washington also grasped the power of his symbolic position as
president. He sought to leverage that for the good of the nation.
As
president, Washington could not advertise his actions effectively via Twitter
and social media. He had to show himself around constantly, no matter the
weather. He had to painstakingly attend balls, plays, dinners, public
receptions and of course the church. Every occasion, every Thanksgiving
counted.
Through
his outings, Washington met with a diversity of people, including those who
were second-class citizens or were not citizens at all. Women, for example,
greeted Washington at nearly every stop of the extended presidential
trips he took between 1789 and 1791. Textile workers in New England, Jewish
leaders in Newport, many enslaved persons in the South and churchgoers
everywhere did the same.
These
women and men, in bondage or free, believers or skeptics, played a part in the
invention of a new political theater. Maybe, it was just a theatrical illusion.
But these individuals – just like the prisoners in the New York City jail –
thanked President Washington because they felt they were voices in a larger
political culture.
Washington
made sure his Thanksgiving message – not simply a message, but a “proclamation”
– sounded clear and strong: May God “render our national government a blessing
to all the people, by constantly being a Government of wise, just, and
constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed.”
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