We Gather Together (Young Readers Edition): Stories of Thanksgiving from Then to Now

We Gather Together (Young Readers Edition): Stories of Thanksgiving from Then to Now

by Denise Kiernan
We Gather Together (Young Readers Edition): Stories of Thanksgiving from Then to Now

We Gather Together (Young Readers Edition): Stories of Thanksgiving from Then to Now

by Denise Kiernan

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Overview

This young readers adaptation of the New York Times bestselling We Gather Together shares the true story of how Thanksgving became a national holiday and the way gratitude is looked at in America

Fiction: Thanksgiving is an American holiday that began when the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock and met the Indigenous tribes already living there. 

Fact: Thanksgiving celebrations existed before the United States of America and were celebrated in other countries as well.

Fiction: American Thanksgiving was always on the fourth Thursday in November.

Fact: Thanksgiving’s day, date, and even its existence was at the discretion of the president and other leaders until the date was officially established by Congress and signed into law by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1941.

Fiction: George Washington is the person who decided we should celebrate Thanksgiving as a nation at the same time each year.

Fact: Sarah Josepha Hale, a magazine editor and author, petitioned five presidents until she convinced Abraham Lincoln to declare a national day of Thanksgiving in November of 1863, starting an annual tradition continuing to this day.

There is much fiction surrounding the creation of Thanksgiving in America. Denise Kiernan debunks myths, provides facts, and explains how and why Thanksgiving evolved in the United States the way it did—and what gratitude means to society.

This young readers adaptation of Kiernan’s We Gather Together should be required reading in every school in America today.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593404409
Publisher: Penguin Young Readers Group
Publication date: 09/26/2023
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Denise Kiernan is an American journalist, producer, and author who lives in Asheville, North Carolina. She has authored and co-authored several award-winning and bestselling history titles, including The Girls of Atomic City, The Last Castle, and Signing Their Rights Away. You can visit her online at DeniseKiernan.com, on Instagram @iamdenisekiernan, on Facebook @DeniseKiernanAuthor, and on Twitter @DeniseKiernan.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One
And Thus Commenced . . .

Summer began to slowly give way to autumn. The sun dipped below the New Hampshire horizon earlier in the day, and the mercury in the thermometer dipped as well. All across the land, it was a time for harvest. That harvest might be bountiful or not. No matter the season’s yield, Sarah Josepha Hale, along with others in her community in New England, would take a day to stop and give thanks. She expected that the governor of New Hampshire would soon proclaim when this celebration and day of reflection would take place. The holiday happened at a different time each year, but was meaningful no matter when it occurred.

Hale’s life had been painful lately. She had lost someone she loved. She often worried about money. Yet she still welcomed the opportunity to find something for which to be grateful.

Hale had little of her own and also had five young mouths to feed.

She was tired.

It was late.

She held a hungry baby in her arms.

Because Hale was a woman, she had little standing in her town, state, and country. However, she always found something to bravely stand for. It was the 1800s, and her gender meant she had few job opportunities and rights. But she could still do the one thing that brought her some measure of joy. She had a pen. She had a purpose. And she had something to say.

Once again, Sarah Josepha Hale sat down to write.

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