Etching of a group of Natives and a group of Pilgrams, event title written on the top of the image.

This Land is Their Land: The Wampanoag, Plymouth Colony & The Troubled History of Thanksgiving

Boston National Historical Park

  • Nov 17, 2022 at 7:00 PM
  • Fees apply

Register

Please register at the Eventbrite.

Join Old North and Dr. David J. Silverman on Zoom to learn about Wampanoag history and the true story behind the Thanksgiving Myth.

In the familiar American account of the first Thanksgiving, the Pilgrims who settled in Plymouth were pious English refugees fleeing the tyranny of the Old World. They encountered “friendly Indians,” led by Chief Massasoit, who took pity on the bedraggled strangers, taught them how to plant corn and where to fish, and thereby helped them survive their first harsh winters in America. According to this telling of the story, Massassoit’s people helped the colonizers, joined them for a celebratory meal, and then moved offstage.

In this talk, Dr. David J. Silverman will reveal the distortions of the Thanksgiving Myth and dive into the often overlooked history of the Wampanoag people. Dr. Silverman will explore how the traditional Thanksgiving Myth has promoted the idea that Native people willingly ceded their country to the English to give rise to a white, Christian, democratic nation. The talk will trace how the Wampanoags have lived—and told—a different history over the past four centuries.

More information

Fees

Registration is by donation of any amount.

Location

Virtual (Zoom)

Schedule

Date:

Nov 17, 2022

Time:

7:00 PM

Duration:

1 hour and 30 minutes

Event Type

  • Partner Program
  • Virtual/Digital
Tags: old north church, wampanoag, plymouth, thanksgiving, boston national historical park, boston african american national historic site, boston harbor islands national and state park