RE: The Surratt Courier
(11-01-2018 06:21 PM)L Verge Wrote: (11-01-2018 05:33 PM)ReignetteC Wrote: As always, I enjoy reading the Surratt Courier, but the recent edition (November) rings a personal tone.
First, as a lineal Mayflower descendant, I heartily agree with Louise Oertly in her “President’s Message” that “the first Thanksgiving in North America may not have been celebrated by the Pilgrims in Plymouth Massachusetts.” But also as a French Huguenot, I must disagree with the “documented evidence” about the first celebratory feast on September 8, 1565. The Huguenots bested that date by about one year.
In 1564, a group of French Huguenots, who sought haven from being persecuted in France, landed near Jacksonville, Florida. According to Kenneth C. Davis in his NYT column, “A French Connection,” these devout Christians promptly held a “service of ‘Thanksgiving.’” Then, after they had begun to settle in the area, King Philip II, ordered their execution. Spanish forces killed the several hundred Protestant settlers. And with this, continues Davis, “America’s first pilgrims disappeared from the pages of history.”
See: “A French Connection,” New York Times, November 25, 2008
See: https://www.history.com/news/did-florida...anksgiving
See: https://www.huguenotsociety.org/heritage/history/
Second, my third great uncle, the Reverend Dr. Charles Henry Augustus Bulkeley, was the Chaplain in Sickles’s brigade. Family lore holds that he remained a devoted friend to Sickles and stood by his defense in Key’s shooting. Too bad he didn’t read “ Big, Bad, Dan Sickles.” Terrific piece!
Thanks for the history of Thanksgiving lesson, Reignette. I don't think I ever heard about the French Huguenots even settling in Florida. In fact, in high school, there was very little mention of Spaniards in the New World once we got past the explorers. I'll try to find space in the December Courier for this extra piece about the first Thanksgiving. Always a contest between Britain, Spain, and France it seemed.
As for Dan Sickles, it seems to me that he was one of those men who could do no evil in the eyes of his followers. I bet he was the hit at any tavern of his day.
P.S. You might want to change the date in the second full paragraph to 1564, instead of 1864...
Thanks!
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