Thanksgiving is Conservative: Honoring our History & Conserving our Shared Heritage of the Land

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On Oct. 22, 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed the 29th day of November to be a “day of thanksgiving and supplication.” His message about the importance of remembering our past and not taking our blessings for granted still resonates with us today. We reprint Roosevelt’s statement below to remind us that we are responsible for creating the meaning we seek in our lives, our communities, and our nation. We wish you a wonderful Thanksgiving.

President Theodore Roosevelt’s Thanksgiving Proclamation

The time of year has come when, in accordance with the wise custom of our forefathers, it becomes my duty to set aside a special day of thanksgiving and praise to the Almighty because of the blessings we have received, and of prayer that these blessings may be continued. Yet another year of widespread well-being has past.

Never before in our history or in the history of any other nation has a people enjoyed more abounding material prosperity than is ours; a prosperity so great that it should arouse in us no spirit of reckless pride, and least of all a spirit of heedless disregard of our responsibilities; but rather a sober sense of our many blessings, and a resolute purpose, under Providence, not to forfeit them by any action of our own. 

Material well-being, indispensable tho it is, can never be anything but the foundation of true national greatness and happiness. If we build nothing upon this foundation, then our national life will be as meaningless and empty as a house where only the foundation has been laid. Upon our material well-being must be built a superstructure of individual and national life lived in accordance with the laws of the highest morality, or else our prosperity itself will in the long run turn out a curse instead of a blessing. We should be both reverently thankful for what we have received, and earnestly bent upon turning it into a means of grace and not of destruction.

Accordingly I hereby set apart Thursday, the twenty-ninth day of November, next, as a day of thanksgiving and supplication, on which the people shall meet in their homes or their churches, devoutly to acknowledge all that has been given them, and to pray that they may in addition receive the power to use these gifts aright.

Theodore Roosevelt

October 22, 1906