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Gratitude didn’t just arrive with pumpkin pie; it was engineered through careful words and bold timing. We sit down with Dr. Paris Careese to explore how presidential proclamations by George Washington in 1789 and Abraham Lincoln in 1863 shaped Thanksgiving into a unifying civic ritual—and why those choices still influence how we gather, pray, and reflect today. From early congressional requests to wartime appeals for humility, the story of Thanksgiving doubles as a masterclass in statesmanship.

We start with Washington’s first proclamation, issued shortly after Congress drafted the religion clauses of the First Amendment. His language—monotheistic yet nonsectarian—offers thanks for the chance to “establish a form of government for their safety and happiness,” and invites a nation to seek pardon for “our national and other transgressions.” That phrasing marries gratitude with accountability while honoring religious liberty. We unpack how a proclamation differs from a law, why Congress initiated the request, and how Washington’s measured civil-religious tone set a durable pattern for public life.

Then we turn to Lincoln’s 1863 proclamation, crafted in the thick of the Civil War. Lincoln credits “the Most High God” for national blessings even as he recognizes anger “for our sins,” previewing the moral vision of his Second Inaugural. We discuss Sarah Josepha Hale’s campaign for a national Thanksgiving, Lincoln’s pivot from legal argument to moral leadership, and how this rhetoric prepared the ground for reconciliation rather than punishment. Along the way, we reflect on what endures—pluralism, humility, communal gratitude—and how modern traditions, from service to the turkey centerpiece, echo the civic aims of the past.

If you care about American history, religious liberty, and the quiet power of shared rituals, this conversation will change how you experience November. Listen, share with a friend who loves civic ideas, and leave a review telling us which presidential line resonated most. Subscribe for more episodes that connect everyday traditions to the Constitution, culture, and the common good.

Source: https://www.mountvernon.org/george-washington/the-first-president/thanksgiving; George Washington’s Mount Vernon.

 

See also National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-04-02-0091; and Allen, ed., George Washington: A Collection (Liberty Fund, 1988), 534-35

Source: National Archives, at https://education.blogs.archives.gov/2020/11/22/lincolns-thanksgiving-proclamation/; https://docsteach.org/document/lincoln-thanksgiving-proclamation/

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