Thanksgiving in the Shadow of Gettysburg
When we gather around the table each November, it’s easy to think of Thanksgiving as a joyous combination of turkey, pumpkin pie, and family traditions. But the modern holiday was born in one of America’s darkest years. In July 1863, the Battle of Gettysburg left more than 50,000 casualties, a staggering toll that shook the nation.
transformING grief into gratitude
Just months after the Battle of Gettysburg, President Abraham Lincoln sought to transform grief into gratitude. While Americans had celebrated a day of Thanksgiving in different ways and different days over the years, on October 3, 1863, Lincoln proclaimed a national day of Thanksgiving, urging Americans to pause and give thanks “with one heart and one voice” despite the ongoing war. This was the first time Thanksgiving was celebrated as a unified national holiday.
The Gettysburg Address and Thanksgiving’s Spirit
Lincoln returned to Gettysburg in November 1863 to dedicate the Soldiers’ National Cemetery. His Gettysburg Address, delivered just weeks after his Thanksgiving Proclamation, echoed the same themes: sacrifice, unity, and renewal. He reminded the nation that the fallen had given “the last full measure of devotion” and challenged the living to ensure that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth”.
Together, the proclamation and the address framed Thanksgiving not just as a harvest festival, but as a civic ritual of gratitude, healing, and recommitment to democracy.
Thanksgiving Today
Every Thanksgiving, Gettysburg reminds us that gratitude is not only about abundance but also about resilience. The holiday carries echoes of Lincoln’s call for grace, unity, and peace. When we pause to give thanks, we participate in a tradition shaped by the battlefield and the words that sought to heal a fractured nation.
Thanksgiving’s roots run through Gettysburg. The holiday became a national tradition because Lincoln, standing amid the scars of war, asked Americans to find gratitude even in grief. That legacy continues each November, reminding us that Thanksgiving is as much about memory and unity as it is about feasting.