Hale believed a national day of thanksgiving could unite Americans and promote national unity, especially during times of division like the Civil War.
After years of campaigning through her magazine and personal letters to officials, Hale's letter to President Lincoln in 1863 convinced him to declare Thanksgiving a national holiday.
The first Thanksgiving was a feast between the Wampanoags and the English colonists of Plymouth, but it occurred in a context of the Wampanoags outnumbering and aiding the struggling colonists.
Metacom felt betrayed by the colonists' lack of respect and treatment of the Wampanoags as inferiors, despite the initial help given by his father, Chief Usamequin.
The myth began to take hold in the 1840s when a minister added a footnote to a primary source account of the 1621 feast, labeling it the 'first Thanksgiving.'
The Civil War made Thanksgiving a more significant symbol of national unity, especially after Lincoln's proclamation in 1863, which aimed to bring together a divided nation.
The Wampanoags persisted through the U.S. government's aggressive policies by finding ways to make their traditional lands work for them and passing down their own stories and histories.
Hale used her platform as editor of Godey's Ladies Book to advocate for women's education, oppose slavery, and promote a unified national culture through holidays like Thanksgiving.
Some Southerners, like Virginia's Governor Henry Wise, saw Thanksgiving as a 'Yankee holiday' associated with abolitionist preaching, fearing it could be used to spread anti-slavery sentiments.
The Gettysburg battle in 1863 was a major Union victory that turned the tide of the Civil War, making it a fitting backdrop for Lincoln's proclamation of Thanksgiving as a national holiday shortly after.
The Thanksgiving story most of us hear is about friendship and unity. And that's what Sarah Josepha Hale had on her mind when she sat down to write a letter to President Lincoln in 1863, deep into the Civil War. Hale had already spent years campaigning for a national day of thanksgiving, using her platform as editor of one the country's most widely-read magazines and writing elected officials to argue that Americans urgently needed a national story. But she'd gotten nowhere – until now.Five days after reading her letter, Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a national holiday. At the time, no one was talking about Pilgrims and Native Americans. But that too would change.Today on the show: a Thanksgiving story you may not have heard, how it happened, and what it leaves out.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices)NPR Privacy Policy)