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image from unsplash.com Good Monday morning. We have clouds and fog. The prediction is to have rain, and I think we will get some today and tonight. It will be warm at 50F(10C) so no snow. But it will be damp. Stay dry, stay safe.
Australia family and friends For Tuesday Nov 25 will be at 77F(25C) but they too are to have rain at 35%. One of the friends wrote it is almost getting humid out for them with the heat and the rain. They have been having rain, so everything is looking green and growing. I will post this week more pictures of the Botanic gardens and let you see what their spring is like. Stay dry, stay safe. In our Thanksgiving church message, Pastor said that Pres. Lincoln during the Civil War made this a national holiday. Somehow, I missed that in the history lessons I had. This morning, I found this article about how it all happened thanks to a lady named Sarah. Interesting read. Sarah Josepha Hale: The Godmother of Thanksgiving Written By: Catherine Boeckmann Sarah Josepha Hale can be thanked for founding Thanksgiving! This Thanksgiving, take a little time to remember Sarah Josepha Hale, the woman who helped make this National Day of Thanks possible. Who Was Sarah Josepha Hale? Sarah Josepha Buell was born on October 24, 1788, on a farm in Newport, New Hampshire. From a tender age, she was curious, smart, and eager to learn. As a young girl, Sarah was taught by her mother about history and literature. Later, her brother Horatio taught her everything that he was learning as a student at Dartmouth College. When Sarah was growing up, women were not accepted as teachers. However, this didn’t stop Sarah from founding a private school when she was 18 years old. She taught until she met David Hale. They married in 1813. David encouraged Sarah to write short stories and articles. Many of these were published in local newspapers. Suddenly, in 1822, David died, and Sarah Hale was left to care for their five children. To make ends meet, she first operated a women’s hat shop and later resumed teaching and writing. Soon, she published her first book of poems, including one that became the famous nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb.” In 1827, she published her first novel. John Blake of Boston read Hale’s novel and asked her to work for him on Ladies’ Magazine. She accepted and became the first woman editor of a magazine in the United States. Hale introduced new ideas and a new title, calling it American Ladies’ Magazine. Within a few years, Louis Godey of Philadelphia had bought Blake’s magazine and merged it with Godey’s Lady’s Book, keeping Hale as editor. How Did Sarah Josepha Hale Start Thanksgiving? Throughout her time as an editor, Hale had written hundreds of letters to governors, ministers, newspaper editors, and every U.S. president with one request: that the last Thursday in November be set aside to “offer to God our tribute of joy and gratitude for the blessings of the year.” Native American harvest festivals had taken place for centuries in North America, and there had long been colonists’ services to give thanks, but there had never been a Thanksgiving holiday. In 1863, with the country torn by the Civil War, Hale’s campaign finally got people’s attention. That September, she put her Thanksgiving message into an editorial and wrote to President Abraham Lincoln, urging him to make Thanksgiving Day a fixed national festival. Lincoln liked Hale’s idea. On October 3, 1863, he issued a proclamation declaring the last Thursday of November to be National Thanksgiving Day. He ordered all government offices in Washington to close on that day. The Fourth Thursday in November In 1939, store owners pressured President Franklin Roosevelt to move Thanksgiving Day to the third Thursday in November. They wanted more shopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas. He did it, but millions of Americans continued to celebrate Thanksgiving Day on the last Thursday of November. In 1940, FDR realized his mistake. In December 1941, he assigned the holiday to the fourth Thursday in November. Thanksgiving in Canada Occasions for Thanksgiving in Canada have been observed for hundreds of years. Thanksgiving became a national holiday in 1879; its date each year was determined by proclamation. In 1957, Parliament set the second Monday in October as the fixed date “for general thanksgiving to Almighty God for the blessings with which the people of Canada have been favoured. https://www.almanac.com/sarah-josepha-hale-godmother-thanksgiving? Till next time this is Becky Litterer, Becky’s Greenhouse, Dougherty Iowa [email protected] 641-794-3337 cell 641-903-9365 Beckysgreenhouse.com Facebook Becky Kerndt Litterer or Becky’s Greenhouse
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AuthorHi! My name is Becky and I am a Master Gardener. I own Becky's Greenhouse in Dougherty, Iowa. Archives
February 2026
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