First
Thanksgiving Facts
Thanksgiving Day is celebrated on the fourth
Thursday in November in the United States.
It is celebrated on the second Monday in October
in Canada.
By the fall of 1621 only half of the pilgrims, who had sailed on the Mayflower,
survived. The survivors, thankful to be alive, decided to give a thanksgiving
feast.
The Plymouth
Pilgrims were the first to celebrate Thanksgiving.
The Pilgrims arrived in North
America in December 1620.
They sailed across the Atlantic Ocean to reach North America.
Their ship was called the 'Mayflower'.
The first Thanksgiving was celebrated in the fall of 1621.
It was held in the colony of Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Puritans brought beer with them in the Mayflower and it was present at this
celebration.
To learn more fun facts about the first
Thanksgiving, visit theholidayspot.com.
Turkey Facts
Benjamin Franklin wanted the turkey to be the
official national bird of the United States of America.
More than 45 million turkeys are cooked and eaten
in the U.S. at Thanksgiving, which accounts for one sixth of all turkeys sold in
the U.S. each year.
The average cost per pound of turkey is $1.
Age is a determining factor in the taste of your
turkey. Old, large males are tastier than young toms (males) as tom meat is
stringy. The opposite is true for females: old hens are tougher birds.
A young "roaster" is five to seven
months old, while a turkey under sixteen weeks of age is called a "fryer".
Turkeys are the only poultry birds native to the
Western Hemisphere.
Domesticated turkeys cannot fly. However, wild
turkeys can fly for short distances at speeds up to 55 miles per hour. Wild
turkeys can also run up to 25 miles per hour.
Turkeys sometimes spend the night in trees.
Turkeys can have heart attacks. In areas
where the U.S. Air Force did testing to break the sound barrier, turkeys were
known to drop dead from the shock of passing jets.
The ballroom dance known as the Turkey Trot was
named for the short, jerky steps a turkey makes.
To learn more fun facts about turkeys, visit Fowl
FAQ and Turkey
Facts.
More Links to Fun Facts:
KidZone - Animal Facts:
Turkeys
Turkey Trivia
Quiz
Thanksgiving
Fun Facts - History.com
Images courtesy of theholidayspot.com.