For Decades, Southern States Considered Thanksgiving an Act of Northern Aggression
For Decades, Southern States Considered Thanksgiving an Act of Northern Aggression
Although meant to unify people, the 19th-century campaign to make Thanksgiving a permanent holiday was seen by prominent Southerners as a culture war. They considered it a Northern holiday intended to force New England values on the rest of the country. To them, pumpkin pie, a Yankee food, was a deviously sweet symbol of anti-slavery sentiment.