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Give thanks to God, for our minds and hands, and for this bountiful earth, so we may be strengthened in His service.
1 posted on 11/24/2014 3:57:05 AM PST by Ray76
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To: Ray76

Cool! I’ve seen this before, but I never knew where to find it. Now I have a place. Thanks so much, and to you and yours, have a bountiful and happy Thanksgiving.


2 posted on 11/24/2014 5:21:39 AM PST by Wingy
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To: Ray76

March 1
John Robinson died in Holland.
Cornelius May took 30 families to New Netherlands for the Dutch West India Company.
__________________________________________

That ship was the Nieuw Nederlandt (New Netherland) I had ancestors onboard.

Philippe Du Trieux and his 2nd wife Susannah du Chesne and his 2 children Philippe and Maria from his first wife Jacqueline Noirett


3 posted on 11/24/2014 6:11:38 AM PST by Tennessee Nana
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To: Ray76
Not to disparage the good work you've done with this post, but I think we'd should stop trying to make any connection to "The First Thanksgiving" in connection with our modern day celebration of Thanksgiving Day. It's not a commemoration of a past event. It's a holiday that stands on its own.

The left wants to destroy this holiday because it unashamedly invokes God, Country, Family and they've been using the "dead white males" angle to do it.

4 posted on 11/24/2014 7:41:24 AM PST by Oratam
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To: Ray76

What we’ve all been taught is a part of the history: The Pilgrims came, they almost starved, the Indians taught them how to survive, and they had a big feast. All true. But it’s the tip of the iceberg.

The Puritans were being persecuted in Britain by the Church of England. They decided to get out. They first went to the Netherlands. After several years there, they decided to go to the New World for religious liberty.

They found some sponsors for their journey, who made William Bradford, their leader, sign a contract. It provided that every Pilgrim would get one share in a common store and they would all work for the community. (They would own nothing and be happy.)

They arrived at Plymouth Rock in 1620. Between the journey and that harsh first winter, about 44 of the original 100 settlers died. Including Governor Bradford’s wife.

The Native Americans taught them how to plant corn and fish, but according to Governor Bradford’s notes, even the most industrious didn’t work very hard at it. After all, why work so hard when you’re only going to get the same amount as the ones who don’t? Why expend all that effort for other people’s families when they’re not willing to expend the effort for themselves? So Governor Bradford changed the system.

Bradford assigned each family a plot of land and told them to work it as they saw fit, and they could keep the proceeds or trade it or sell it or give it away, if they chose. (Does this sound familiar?)

Well, they thrived. They produced an abundance of food and goods. Probably more than they could figure out what to do with. In gratitude to God, they had a big community feast to use and share all they had produced, and they invited the Indigenous to thank them for their help (and as a gesture of friendship.)

The original system in which everyone worked for the collective failed. It almost starved them to death. The new system, which incentivized producing as much as you wanted, produced an abundance they had to share.

Accordingly, one of the things I am grateful for today is Governor Bradford’s decision to abandon the failing collectivism of the original Compact and adopt a system based on incentive, which gave rise to an abundance we still enjoy.


5 posted on 11/23/2023 7:06:27 PM PST by TBP (Decent people cannot fathom the amoral cruelty of the Biden regime.)
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