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IX
HOLIDAYS AND FESTIVALS THE first century of colonial life saw few
set times
and days for pleasures. The holy days of the English Church were as a
stench to
the Puritan nostrils, and their public celebration was at once rigidly
forbidden
by the laws of New England. New holidays were not quickly evolved, and
the
sober gatherings for matters of Church and State for a time took their
place.
The hatred of "wanton Bacchanallian Christmasses" spent throughout
England, as Cotton said, in "revelling, dicing, carding, masking,
mumming,
consumed in compotations, in interludes, in excess of wine, in mad
mirth,"
was the natural reaction of intelligent and thoughtful minds against
the
excesses of a festival which had ceased to be a Christian holiday, but
was
dominated by a lord of misrule who did not hesitate to invade the
churches in
time of service, in his noisy revels and sports. English Churchmen long
ago
revolted also against such Christmas observance. Of the first Pilgrim Christmas we know but
little,
save that it was spent, as was many a later one, in work. Bradford
said:
"Ye 25 day began to erect first house for comon use to receive them and
their goods." On the following Christmas the governor records with grim
humor a "passage rather of mirth than of waight." Some new company
excused themselves from work on that day, saying it went against their
consciences. The governor answered that he would spare them until they
were
better informed. But returning at mid-day and finding them playing
pitch-the-bar
and stool-ball in the streets, he told them that it was against his
conscience
that they should play and others work, and so made them cease their
games. By 1659 the Puritans had grown to hate
Christmas more
and more; it was, to use Shakespeare's words, "the bug that feared them
all." The very name smacked to them of incense, stole, and monkish
jargon;
any person who observed it as a holiday by forbearing of labor,
feasting, or
any other way was to pay five shillings fine, so desirous were they to
"beate
down every sprout of Episcopacie." Judge Sewall watched jealously the
feeling of the people with regard to Christmas, and noted with pleasure
on each
succeeding year tho continuance of common traffic throughout the day.
Such
entries as this show his attitude: "Dec. 25, 1685. Carts come to town
and
shops open as usual. Some somehow observe the day, but are vexed I
believe that
the Body of people profane it, and blessed be God no authority yet to
compel
them to keep it." When the Church of England established Christmas
services in Boston a few years later, we find the Judge waging hopeless
war
against Governor Belcher over it, and hear him praising his son for not
going
with other boy friends to hear the novel and attractive services. He
says:
"I dehort mine from Christmas keeping and charge them to forbear." Christmas could not be regarded till this
century as
a New England holiday, though in certain localities, such as old
Narragansett —
an opulent community which was settled by Episcopalians — two weeks of
Christmas visiting and feasting were entered into with zest by both
planters
and slaves for many years previous to the Revolution. Thanksgiving, commonly regarded as being
from its
earliest beginning a distinctive New England festival, and an equally
characteristic Puritan holiday, was originally neither. The first New England Thanksgiving was not
observed
by either Plymouth Pilgrim or Boston Puritan. "Gyving God thanks" for
safe arrival and many other liberal blessings was first heard on New
England
shores from the lips of the Popham colonists at Monhegan, in the
Thanksgiving
service of the Church of England. Days set apart for thanksgiving were known
in Europe
before the Reformation, and were in frequent use by Protestants
afterward,
especially in the Church of England, where they were a fixed custom
long before
they were in New England. One wonders that the Puritans, hating so
fiercely the
customs and set days and holy days of the Established Church, should so
quickly
have appointed a Thanksgiving Day. But the first New England
Thanksgiving was
not a day of religious observance, it was a day of recreation. Those
who fancy
all Puritans, and especially all Pilgrims, to have been sour, morose,
and
gloomy men should read this account of the first Thanksgiving week (not
day) in
Plymouth. It was written on December 11, 1621, by Edward Winslow to a
friend in
England: "Our harvest being gotten in our governor
sent
four men on fowling that so we might after a special manner rejoice
together
after we had gathered the fruits of our labors. They four killed as
much fowl
as with a little help beside served the company about a week. At which
times
among other recreations we exercised our arms, many of the Indians
coming
amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massasoyt with some
ninety
men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out
and
killed five deer which they brought and bestow'd on our governor, and
upon the
captains and others." As Governor Bradford specified that during
that
autumn "beside waterfoule ther was great store of wild turkies," we
can have the satisfaction of feeling sure that at that first Pilgrim
Thanksgiving our forefathers and foremothers had turkeys. Thus fared the Pilgrims better at their
Thanksgiving
than did their English brothers, for turkeys were far from plentiful in
England
at that date. Though there were but fifty-five English
to eat the
Pilgrim Thanksgiving feast, there were "partakers in plenty," and the
ninety sociable Indian visitors did not come empty-handed, but joined
fraternally in provision for the feast, and probably also in the games.
These recreations were, without doubt,
competitions
in running, leaping, jumping, and perhaps stool-ball, a popular game
played by
both sexes, in which a ball was driven from stool to stool or wicket to
wicket.
During that chilly November week in
Plymouth,
Priscilla Mullins and John Alden may have "recreated" themselves with
this ancient form of croquet — if any recreation were possible for the
four
women of the colony, who, with the help of one servant and a few young
girls or
maidekins, had to prepare and cook food for three days for one hundred
and
twenty hungry men, ninety-one of them being Indians, with an unbounded
capacity
for gluttonous gorging unsurpassed by any other race. Doubtless the
deer, and
possibly the great turkeys, were roasted in the open air. The picture
of that
Thanksgiving Day, the block-house with its few cannon, the Pilgrim men
in buff
breeches, red waistcoats, and green or sad-colored mandillions; the
great
company of Indians, gay in holiday paint and feathers and furs; the few
sad,
overworked, homesick women, in worn and simple gowns, with plain coifs
and
kerchiefs, and the pathetic handful of little children, forms a keen
contrast to
the prosperous, cheerful Thanksgivings of a century later. There is no record of any special
religious service
during this week of feasting. The Pilgrims had good courage, stanch
faith, to thus
celebrate and give thanks, for they apparently had but little cause to
rejoice.
They had been lost in the woods, where they had wandered surbated, and
had been
terrified by the roar of "Lyons," and had met wolves that "sat
on thier tayles and grinned" at them; they had been half frozen in
their
poorly built houses; had been famished, or sickened with unwonted and
unpalatable food; their common house had burned down, half their
company was
dead — they had borne sore sorrows, and equal trials were to come. They
were in
dire distress for the next two years. In the spring of 1623 a drought
scorched
the corn and stunted the beans, and in July a fast day of nine hours of
prayer
was followed by a rain that revived their "withered corn and their
drooping affections." In testimony of their gratitude for the rain,
which
would not have been vouchsafed for private prayer, and thinking they
would
"show great ingratitude if they smothered up the same," the second
Pilgrim Thanksgiving was ordered and observed. In 1630, on February 22d, the first public
thanksgiving was held in Boston by the Bay Colony, in gratitude for the
safe
arrival of food-bearing and friend-bringing ships. On November 4, 1631,
Winthrop wrote again: "We kept thanksgiving day in Boston." From that
time till 1684 there were at least twenty-two public thanksgiving days
appointed in Massachusetts — about one in two years; but it was not a
regular
biennial festival. In 1675, a time of deep gloom through the many and
widely
separated attacks from the fierce savages, there was no public
thanksgiving
celebrated in either Massachusetts or Connecticut. It is difficult to
state
when the feast became a fixed annual observance in New England. In the
year
1742 were two Thanksgiving Days. Rhode Islanders paid little heed in early
days to
Thanksgiving — at any rate, to days set by the Massachusetts
authorities.
Governor Andros savagely prosecuted more than one Rhode Islander who
calmly
worked all day long on the day appointed for giving thanks. In Boston,
William
Veazie was set in the pillory in the market-place for ploughing on the
Thanksgiving Day of June 18, 1696. He said his king had granted liberty
of
conscience, and that the reigning king, William, was not his ruler;
that King
James was his royal prince, and since he did not believe in setting
apart days
for thanksgiving he should not observe them. Connecticut people, though just as pious
and as
prosperous as the Bay colonists, do not appear to have been as
grateful, and
had considerable trouble at times to "pick vppon a day" for
thanksgiving; and the festival was not regularly observed there till
1716. Thanksgiving was not always appointed in
early days
for the same token of God's beneficence. Days of thanks were set in
gratitude
for and observance of great political and military events, for
victories over
the Indians or in the Palatinate, for the accession of kings, for the
prospect
of royal heirs to the throne, for the discovery of conspiracy, for the
"healing of breaches," the "dissipation of the Pirates,"
the abatement of diseases, for the safe arrival of "psons of spetiall
use
and quality," as well as in gratitude for plentiful harvests — that
"God had not given them cleannes of teeth and wante of bread." The early Thanksgivings were not always
set upon
Thursday. It is said that that day was chosen on account of its
reflected glory
as lecture day. Judge Sewall told the governor and his council, in
1697, that
they "desir'd the same day of the week might be for Thanksgiving and
Fasts," and that "Boston and Ipswitch Lectures led us to
Thursday." The feast of thanks was for many years appointed with equal
frequency upon "Tusday com seven-night," or "vppon Wensday
comfort-nit." Nor was any special season of the year chosen: in 1716 it
was appointed in August; in 1713, in January; in 1718, in December; in
1719, in
October. The frequent appointments in gratitude for bountiful harvests
finally
made the autumn the customary time. The God of the Puritans was a jealous God,
and many
fasts were appointed to avert his wrath, as shown in blasted wheat,
moulded
beans, wormy pease, and mildewed corn; in drought and grasshoppers; in
Indian
invasions; in caterpillars and other woes of New England; in children
dying by
the chincough; in the "raigns from the botles of Heaven" — all these
evils being sent for the crying sins of wig-wearing, sheltering
Quakers, not
paying the ministers, etc. A fast and a feast kept close company in
Puritan
calendars. A fast frequently preceded Thanksgiving Day, and was
sometimes
appointed for the day succeeding the feast — a clever plan which had
its good
hygienic points. Days of private as well as of public fast and
thanksgiving
were also observed by individuals. Judge Sewall took the greatest
satisfaction
in his fastings, and carefully outlined his plan of prayer throughout
the fast
day, which he spent in his chamber — a plan which included and
specified
ministers, rulers and magistrates, his family, and every person whom he
said
"had a smell of relation" to him; and also every nation and people in
the known world. He does not note Thanksgiving Day as a holiday of any
importance. Though in the mind of the Puritan,
Christmas smelled
to heaven of idolatry, when his own festival, Thanksgiving, became
annual, it
assumed many of the features of the old English Christmas; it was
simply a day
of family reunion in November instead of December, on which Puritans
ate turkey
and Indian pudding and pumpkin-pie, instead of "superstitious meats"
such as a baron of beef, boar's head, and plum-pudding. Many funny stories are told of the early
Thanksgiving
Days, such as the town of Colchester calmly ignoring the governor's
appointed
day and observing their own festival a week later in order to allow
time for
the arrival, by sloop from New York, of a hogshead of molasses for
pies.
Another is recounted of a farmer losing his cask of Thanksgiving
molasses out
of his cart as he reached the top of a steep hill, and of its rolling
swiftly
down till split in twain by its fall. His helpless discomfiture and his
wife's
acidity of temper and diet are comically told. There is in the possession of the
Massachusetts
Historical Society a broadside announcing a thanksgiving for victory in
King
Philip's War; and during the following year, 1677, the first regular
Thanksgiving proclamation was printed. But Thanksgiving Day was not the chief New
England
holiday. Ward, writing in 1699, does not name it, saying of New
Englanders:
"Election, Commencement and Training Days are their only Holy Days." It was natural in New England, a state
planted by men
of exceptional intelligence, that all should think as one minister
said,
"If the college die, the church cannot long live; "and in the
Commencement Day of their colleges they found matter of deep interest,
of
pride, of recreation. Judge Sewall always notes the day at Harvard, its
exercises, its dinner, its plentiful wine, and the Commencement cake,
which he
carried to his friends. The meagre entries in the diaries and almanacs
of many
an old New England minister show that Commencement Day was one of their
proudest holidays. After 1730, Commencement Day was usually set for
Friday, in
order that there might be, as President Wadsworth said in his diary, "remaining time in the week to be spent
in frolicking." Training Day may be called the first New
England
holiday, though Hawthorne thought the day of too serious importance in
early
warlike times to be classed under the head of festivals. At the first
Pilgrim
Thanksgiving they "exercised their arms," and for some years they had
six trainings a year; no wonder they were said to be "diligent in
traynings." The all-powerful Church Militant held sway even over these
gatherings of New England warriors. The military reviews and exercises
were
made properly religious by an opening exercise of prayer and
psalm-singing, the
latter sometimes at such inordinate length as to provoke criticism and
remarks
from the rank and file, remonstrance which was at once pleasantly
rebuked by
pious Judge Sewall. Religious notices were also given before the
company broke
line. A noble dinner somewhat redeemed the sobriety of the opening
exercises, a
dinner given in Boston to gentlemen and gentlewomen in tents on the
Common; and
the frequent firing of guns and cannon further enlivened the day. Boston mustered a very fair military force
at
trainings, even in early days. Winthrop writes that at the May training
in 1639
one thousand men exercised, and in the autumn twelve hundred bore arms,
and not
an oath or quarrel was heard and no drunkenness seen. The training
field was
Boston Common. At these trainings prizes were frequently offered for
the best
marksmanship; in Connecticut, a silk handkerchief or some such trinket.
Judge
Sewall offered a silver cup, and again a silver-headed pike; since he
was an
uncommonly poor shot himself, his generosity shows out all the more
plainly.
With barbaric openness of cruel intent, a figure stuffed to represent a
human
form was often the target, and it was a matter of grave decision
whether a shot
in the head or bowels were the fatal one. Sometimes the day was
enlivened by a
form of amusement ever beloved of the colonists — by public
punishments. For
instance, at the training day at Kittery, Me., in 1690, two men "road
the
woodin Horse for dangerous and churtonous carig and mallplying of
oaths." The training days of colony times
developed into
Muster Days, the crowning pinnacle of gayety, dissipation, and noise in
a
country boy's life in New England for over a century. We owe much to these trainings and these
trials of
marksmanship. In conjunction with the universal skill in woodcraft and
in
hunting, they made our ancestors more than a match for the Indian and
the
Frenchman, and in Revolutionary times gave them their ascendency over
the
English. Election Day was naturally a time of much
excitement
to New Englanders in olden times, as nowadays. In fact, the entire week
partook
of the flavor of a holiday. This did not please the ministers. Urian
Oakes
wrote sadly that Election Day had become a time "to meet, to smoke,
carouse and swagger and dishonor God with the greater bravery." Various
local customs obtained. "'Lection cake," a sort of rusk rich with
fruit and wine, was made in many localities; indeed, is still made in
some
families that I know; and sometimes "'lection beer" was brewed. In
early May the herb gatherers (many of them old squaws) brought to town
various
barks and roots for this beer, and they also vended it on the streets
during
Election week. An Election sermon was also preached. Boston had two Election Days. "Nigger
'Lection" was so called in distinction from Artillery Election. On the
former anniversary day the election of the governor was formally
announced, and
the black population was allowed to throng the Common, to buy
gingerbread and
drink beer like their white betters. On the second holiday the Ancient
and
Honorable Artillery had a formal parade, and chose its new officers,
who
received with much ceremony, out-of-doors, their new commissions from
the new
governor. Woe, then, to the black face that dared be seen on that grave
and
martial occasion! In 1817 a negro boy named William Read, enraged at
being
refused the high privileges and pleasures of Artillery Day, blew up in
Boston
Harbor a ship called the Canton Packet. For years it was a standing
taunt of
white boys in Boston to negroes: Nigger, why for? 'Cause he couldn't go to 'lection An' shake paw-paw." Paw-paw was a gambling game which was
played on the
Common with four sea-shells of the Cyproea Moneta. The 14th of July was observed by Boston
negroes for
many years to commemorate the introduction of measures to abolish the
slave
trade. It was derisively called Bobalition Day, and the orderly
convention of
black men was greeted with a fusillade of rotten fruit and eggs and
much
jesting abuse. It was at one of these Bobalition-Day celebrations that
this
complimentary toast was seriously given and recorded in honor of the
newly
elected governor: "Governor Brooks — May the mantelpiece of Caleb
Strong
fall on the hod of his distinguished Predecessor." In other localities, notably on the
Massachusetts coast,
in Connecticut, and in Narragansett, the term "Nigger 'Lection" was
applied to the election of a black governor, who held his sway over the
black
population. Wherever there was a large number of negroes the black
governor was
a man of much dignity and importance, and his election was a scene of
much
gayety and considerable feasting, which the governor's master had to
pay for.
As he had much control over his black constituents, it is plain that
the black
governor might be made useful in many petty ways to his white
neighbors.
Occasionally the "Nigger 'Lection" had a deep political signification
and influence. "Scaeva," in his "Hartford in the Olden
Times," and Hinman, in the "American Revolution," give detailed and
interesting accounts of "'Lection." A few rather sickly and benumbed attempts
were made
in bleak New England to celebrate in old English fashion the first of
May. A
May-pole was erected in Charlestown in 1687, and was promptly cut down.
The
most unbounded observance of the day was held at Merry Mount (now the
town of
Quincy) in 1628 by roystering Morton and his gay crew. Bradford says:
"They set up a May-pole, drinking and dancing aboute it many days
together, inviting the Indian women for their consorts, dancing and
frisking
togeather like so many fairies or furies rather." This May-pole was a
stately pine-tree eighty feet high, with a pair of buck's horns nailed
at the
top, and with "sundry rimes and verses affixed." Stern Endicott rode
down ere long to investigate matters, and at once cut the "idoll
Maypole" down, and told the junketers that he hoped to hear of their
"better walking, else they would find their merry mount but a woful
mount." To eat pancakes on Shrove Tuesday was held
by the
Puritans to be a heathenish vanity; and yet, apparently with the
purpose of
annoying good Boston folk, some attempts were made to observe the day.
One year
a young man went through the town "carrying a cook on his back with a
bell
in 's hand." Several of his fellows followed him blindfolded, and,
under
pretence of striking him with heavy cart-whips, managed to do
considerable
havoc in the surrounding crowd. We can well imagine how odious this
horseplay
was to the Puritans, aggravated by the fact that it was done to note a
holy
day. On Shrove Tuesday, in 1685, there was "great disorder in town by
reason of Cock-skailing." This was the barbarous game of cock-steling,
or
cock-throwing, or cock-squoiling — a game as old as Chaucer's time, a
universal
pastime on Shrove Tuesday in England, where scholars also had
cock-fights in
the school-rooms. The observance, or even notice, of the
first day of
the year as a "gaudy-day" — of New-Year's tides in any way — was
thought by Urian Oakes to savor strongly of superstitious reverence for
the
heathen god Janus; the Pilgrims made no note of their first New-Year's
Day in
the New World, save by this very prosaic record, "We went to work
betimes." Yet Judge Sewall, as rigid and stern a Puritan as any of the
earliest days, records with some pride his being greeted with a levet,
or blast
of trumpets, under his window, early on the morning of January 1, 1697;
while
he himself celebrated the opening of the new century with a very poor
poem of
his own making, which he caused to be cried or recited throughout the
town of
Boston by the town bellman. Guy Fawkes' Day, or "Pope's Day," was
observed with much noise throughout New England for many years by
burning of
bonfires, preceded by parades of young men and boys dressed in
fantastic
costumes and carrying "guys" or "popes" of straw. Fires are
still lighted on the 5th of November in New England towns by boys, who
know not
what they commemorate. In Newburyport, Mass., and Portsmouth, N. H.,
Guy
Fawkes' Day is still celebrated. In Newcastle, N. H., it is called
"Pork
Night." In New York and Brooklyn, the bonfires on the night of
election,
and the importunate begging on Thanksgiving Day of ragged fantastics,
usually
children of Roman Catholic parents, are both direct survivals of the
ancient
celebration of "Pope's Day." In Governor Belcher's time, in
Massachusetts, the
stopping of pedestrians on the street, by "loose and dissolute
people," who were wont to levy contributions for paying for their
bonfires, became so universally annoying that the governor made
proclamation
against them in the newspapers. Tudor, in his "Life of Otis," gives
an account of the observance of the day and its disagreeable features.
He says
the intruders paraded the streets with grotesque images, forcibly
entered
houses, ringing bells, demanding money, and singing rhymes similar to
those
sung all over England:
"Don't you remember
The Fifth of November, The Gunpowder Treason and plot, I see no reason Why Gunpowder Treason Should ever be forgot. From Rome to Rome The Pope is come, Amid ten thousand fears, With fiery serpents to be seen At eyes, nose, mouth, and ears. Don't you hear my little bell Go chink, chink, chink, Please give me a little money To buy my Pope some drink." The figure of the Pretender was added to
that of the
pope and devil in 1702; and on Pope's Day, in 1763, American politics
took a
share. I read in a diary of that date, "Pope, Devil, and Stampman were
hung together." After the Revolution the effigy of Benedict Arnold was
burnt alongside that of Guy Fawkes. Though we retained Pope's Day until
Federal times,
the Declaration of Independence struck one holiday off our calendar.
The king's
birthday was, until then, celebrated with a training, a salute of
cannon, a
dinner, and an illumination. Other holidays were evolved by
circumstances.
Anniversary Day was a special festival for the ministers, who gathered
together
in the larger towns for spiritual intercourse and the material
refreshment of a
good dinner: It was originally held in Massachusetts at the May meeting
of the
General Court. Forefathers' Day, the anniversary of the landing at
Plymouth,
was celebrated by dinners, prayer, and praise. Many other annual scenes of gayety were
developed by
the various food harvests. Thus the time when the salmon and shad came
up the
rivers had been a great merry-making and season of feasting for the
Indian, and
became equally so for the white man. As years passed on it became also
a time
of much drunkenness and revelry. Men rode a hundred miles for these gay
holidays, and went home with horses laden down with fish. Shad were so
plentiful that they were thrown away, would sell for but a penny
apiece, and no
persons of social importance or of good taste would eat them except in
secret.
Salmon, too, were so plentiful and so cheap that farm-servants on the
banks of
the Connecticut stipulated that they should have salmon for dinner but
thrice a
week, as the rich fish soon proved cloying. In many localities, in Narragansett in
particular,
the autumnal corn-huskings almost reached the dignity of holidays,
being
conducted in a liberal fashion and with unbounded hospitality, which
included
and entertained whole retinues of black servants from neighboring
farms, as
well as the planters and their families. Apple-parings, maple-sugar
makings,
and timber-rollings were merry gatherings. In Vermont and down the Connecticut valley
the annual
sheep-shearing was a lively scene. On Nantucket there took place
annually a
like sheep-shearing, which, though a characteristic New England
festival, was
like the scene in the "Winter's Tale." The broad plains outside the
town were used as a common sheep-pasture throughout the year; sometimes
fifteen
or sixteen thousand sheep were kept thereon. About two miles from the
town was
a sheep-fold, near the margin of a pond, where the sheep could be
washed. It
was built of four or five concentric fences, which thus formed a sort
of
labyrinth, into which and through which the sheep and lambs were driven
at
shearing-time, and in it they were sorted out and placed in cotes or
pens
erected for each sheep-owner. The existence of carefully registered
ear-marks,
with which each lamb was branded, formed a means of identifying each
owner's
sheep and lambs. Of course, this gathering brought together all the
sheep
drivers and herders, the sheep washers and shearers. Vast preparations
of food
and drink were made for their entertainment, and tents were reared for
their
occupancy, and, of course, fiddlers and peddlers, like Antolycus,
flocked there
also, and much amusement and frolicking accompanied the shearing. Even
the
sheep, panting with their heavy wool when within the folds, and the
shorn and
shivering creatures running around outside and bleating for their old
long-wooled companions, added to the excitement of the scene. Perhaps
the
maritime occupation of the Islanders made them enjoy with the zest of
unwontedness this rural "shore-holiday." But it exists no longer; the
island is not now one vast sheep-pasture, and there are no longer any
sheep-shearings. |