On Thanksgiving

Jennie Bunscombe, "The First Thanksgiving," 1914

Jennie Bunscombe, “The First Thanksgiving,” 1914

“Thanksgiving is not only a holiday, it is a holy day. It is by no means enough to make it an occasion for recreation and feasting. Thanks are not to be returned merely to ourselves or to each other. The day is without significance unless it has a spiritual meaning. For more than three centuries our people have felt the need of celebrating the harvest time as a religious rite by offering thanks to the Creator for all their earthly blessings. There can be no true Thanksgiving without prayer.

“If at any time our rewards have seemed meager, we shall find our justification for Thanksgiving by carefully comparing what we have with what we deserve. The little band of Pilgrims who first established this institution on the shore by Plymouth Rock had no doubts. If their little colony of devoted souls, when exiled to a foreign wilderness by persecution, cut in half by disease, surrounded by hostility and threatened with famine, could give thanks how much more should this great nation, less deserving than the Pilgrims yet abounding in freedom, peace, security and plenty, now have the faith to return thanks to the author of all good and perfect gifts” — Calvin Coolidge, November 26, 1930

The Coolidge family, on Massasoit Street in Northampton, raising the flag, Thanksgiving Day, 1919

The Coolidge family, on Massasoit Street in Northampton, raising the flag, Thanksgiving Day, 1919

Thanksgiving Proclamation, 1923

Continuing the custom instituted by President Washington in 1789, the new President, reflecting over the past year, composed in 1923 the first of six Thanksgiving Proclamations during his service in the White House. It echoes the thanks we owe the Lord not only for His goodness to us this year but also for the exceptional success His favor and providential care have given to America, now in its two hundred and thirty-seventh year since independence:

“The American people, from their earliest days, have observed the wise custom of acknowledging each year the bounty with which divine Providence has favored them. In the beginnings, this acknowledgment was a voluntary return of thanks by the community for the fruitfulness of the harvest. Though our mode of life has greatly changed, this custom has always survived. It has made thanksgiving day not only one of the oldest but one of the most characteristic observances of our country. On that day, in home and church, in family and public gatherings, the whole nation has for generations paid the tribute due from grateful hearts for blessings bestowed.

“To center our thought in this way upon the favor which we have been shown has been altogether wise and desirable. It has given opportunity justly to balance the good and the evil which we have experienced. In that we have never failed to find reasons for being grateful to God for a generous preponderance of the good. Even in the least propitious times, a broad contemplation of our whole position has never failed to disclose overwhelming reasons for thankfulness. Thus viewing our situation, we have found warrant for a more hopeful and confident attitude toward the future.

“In this current year, we now approach the time which has been accepted by custom as most fitting for the calm survey of our estate and the return of thanks. We shall the more keenly realize our good fortune, if we will, in deep sincerity, give to it due thought, and more especially, if we will compare it with that of any other community in the world…

“…We have been blessed with much of material prosperity. We shall be better able to appreciate it if we remember the privations others have suffered, and we shall be the more worthy of it if we use it for their relief. We will do well then to render thanks for the good that has come to us, and show by our actions that we have become stronger, wiser, and truer by the chastenings which have been imposed upon us. We will thus prepare ourselves for the part we must take in a world which forever needs the full measure of service. We have been a most favored people. We ought to be a most generous people. We have been a most blessed people. We ought to be a most thankful people.

“Wherefore, I, Calvin Coolidge, President of the United States, do hereby fix and designate Thursday, the twenty-ninth day of November, as Thanksgiving Day, and recommend its general observance throughout the land. It is urged that the people, gathering in their homes and their usual places of worship, give expression to their gratitude for the benefits and blessings that a gracious Providence has bestowed upon them, and seek the guidance of Almighty God, that they may deserve a continuance of His favor.

“In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.

“Done at the City of Washington, this 5th day of November, in the year of our Lord, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Twenty-three, and of the Independence of the United States, the One Hundred and Forty-eighth.”

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On George Harvey

ImageFew men held as much influence paired with humble perspective as did Ambassador George Harvey. As a journalist, statesman and diplomat for more than forty years, he had shaped history on more than one occasion. Yet, he approached his work as self-deferential service not an opportunity to secure glory among great men.

Appointed by President Harding as Ambassador to Great Britain in 1921, Harvey returned home upon the death of the President and subsequent succession by Calvin Coolidge in the summer of 1923. Coolidge and Harvey hit it off immediately. Both Vermonters, they possessed in like measure an ability to distill the intricate details of each policy question into its essential parts. As Coolidge honors him in his Autobiography, he would learn a “large amount” from Ambassador Harvey on the situation in Europe who “not only had a special aptitude for gathering and digesting information of that nature, but had been located at London for two years, where most of it centered” (pp.187-8).

Their first meeting, shortly after Coolidge succeeded to the Presidency, is recounted in Willis Johnson’s excellent biography, George Harvey: A Passionate Patriot. It was an opportunity for Coolidge to drill, through a series of rapid fire questions, a man who knew the “lay of the land” in Europe as well as domestically.  Coolidge benefited immensely from Harvey’s political instincts. It was not that Harvey told Coolidge what needed to be done for both men knew that the incoming President, ridiculed as “provincial,” had a firmer grasp on affairs than most of the political class did. Harvey furnished the foundation for Coolidge to proceed with the assurance that the new President’s grasp of the situation was sound.

Ambassador Harvey provided Coolidge with an experienced perspective of one who had been “over there” and perceived political attitudes at home going into 1924. The task of securing nomination and election as well as the settlement of war debt and protection of American interests abroad needed men not only of intelligence but also of wisdom and circumspection. It was for this reason that Harvey, combining these qualities, became such an asset to President Coolidge.

While Coolidge would meet with Harvey more frequently than Harding ever did, the Ambassador would notice, favorably, that Coolidge sought advice without depending on it. Coolidge welcomed input but made the final decision himself. That, too, is a distinguishing mark of good leaders. History has seen its share of people who thought themselves greater than they were subsequently misleading the country because of a failure to seek informed opinions outside themselves. Coolidge never indulged such arrogance, explaining his approach this way,

“It has been my policy to seek information and advice wherever I could find it. I have never relied on any particular person to be my unofficial adviser. I have let the merits of each case and the soundness of all advice speak for themselves. My counselors have been those provided by the Constitution and the law” (Autobiography, p.188).

It was on both fronts, domestically and internationally, that Harvey proved his worth as a faithful advocate, dedicated diplomat and tenacious journalist. It was Harvey who, as Ambassador, settled the first of many war debt negotiations. That initial agreement paved the way for the rest of Europe to address their obligations. Not everyone did so but it was America and Great Britain who bore the weight of leadership around the world. Under that leadership, repayment of debts incurred by American aid during World War I found resolution. Harvey praised any nation who soberly committed to its duties. While other nations came to Washington to talk about the weather, “Great Britain arrived and talked business” (Johnson p.343). The settlement was not an easy one: Britain’s share of war debt was $150-200 million annually for sixty years, the terms placing her Majesty’s government in a position to strengthen credit so that only 2.5% in interest could be paid.

By paying its debts, Britain was telling the world how important it is to live responsibly, whether as nations or individuals. It was this very attitude, exemplified by the Coolidge administration, that America expected of itself. It was this seriousness about tackling the problem of debt — in contrast to indecision or worse, complacency — that distinguished the status of a world power from that of subsistence as a mere hireling, dependent on the actions of others for its welfare and best interests. America took its responsibilities seriously and, by resolving on a rule here (paying down the national debt, cutting taxes and reducing Federal expenditures) that the rest of the world could emulate, sent a message that freedom from rather than enslavement to debt forms the wise and sure basis of future economic and political success.

It was Harvey, having retired as Ambassador, who returned to the calling of journalism and was instrumental in explaining the issues at stake in the 1924 election. He was no partisan Republican, as he made plain: He first supported Coolidge because he knew him to be right and then, as he wrote Coolidge, because “you were you.” He would commend Coolidge in personal correspondence to King George V, sending the monarch his own biographical sketch of the new President so that Britain would also understand, and appreciate, the “Yankee” who now led America (Johnson p.375).

As editor of the North American Review, Harvey took up the task of unraveling fact from fiction to navigate through the morass of accusations and counter-claims. In his “Coolidge or Chaos” articles, Harvey exposed the plan then underway to try to throw the election into the House of Representatives, being the second time this honorable man thwarted a plot to manipulate an electoral choice by the people (the first being perpetrated against Cleveland in 1892). The plot was averted by his timely action that informed voters of what was truly at stake for the country.

Whether as journalist or diplomat, Harvey served his country faithfully. He knew his work, executed it conscientiously and answered the call to serve even as his health gave way, dying in August of 1928. His instincts were always sound, as seen when he accurately predicted the electoral victory for Coolidge in 1924, state-by-state, weeks before results were known (Johnson p.413). He seemed to be a man placed at the right time to serve his country where it needed him most.

Introducing Johnson’s biography, former President Coolidge, looked back with effusive approval for his dear friend’s life and accomplishments, writing in June 1929, “A character such as Colonel George Harvey possessed would make him an intense, even an almost fanatical American. He was not wanting in a world vision. He did not lack a vision on any subject. But his ideal of world service was to keep the United States free and unencumbered by any artificial limitations that might hamper it in serving humanity in accordance with its own judgment, in its own time and in its own way. There was little about him that was legalistic. If something ought to be done, it was his way to go and do it. He was purely practical and purely patriotic. As a journalist and author, a politician and a statesman, he left a broad and deep mark on the times in which he lived. Not only our own Country, but the world at large has profited by the life and action of Colonel George Harvey. It is a satisfaction to feel that he was my friend.”

He was one of many exceptional Americans of whom we can, joining with Coolidge, be proud. He remains, among many throughout our history, “worthy of the name American,” as Coolidge would say in a different context. His love of our country and pursuit of the welfare of all its people deserves our renewed study and grateful respect.