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Dinner Story FIRST Thanksgiving 80 Years Before Pilgrims

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Real Estate Agent with HomeSmart Real Estate BR632450000

OK, this is the time of the year when families accross America sit at the dinner table together to give thanks to our Lord for blessings we have had in the past, now and into the future. If you are one of those Grandpas or Dads that like to "tell a story of Thanksgiving" before eating or after. Here is the story of the REAL first Thanksgiving and I am not descibing the more well known Pilgrims.

Of course, this is the time of year when we think of the Pilgrims in the year 1620 and thanking God for the beginnings of our Country in the "New World". However, even before that momentous event in 1620 we should also give thanks for a much earlier "Thanksgiving" 500 years ago in the current day United States in Arizona in 1540 which was 80 years before the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock in 1620 in Massachusetts and in fact before the later arriving Pilgrims were even born!

These early arriving brave Spanish Conquistadors introduced horses to the Native Americans, that prior to their arrival, lived along bodies of water and farmed and hunted. Until that time foot or water travel was all they had available. After the Conquistador's arrival in 1540 horses opened up the West for further exploration and living. The early arrivers also started mission churches over the following 100 years throughout the West, many of which still stand today.

First Arrival in 1540 Makes way through the Arizona desert

Coronado in Arizona

Re-enactors depiction and other similar images from https://southwestphotojournal.com/2012/11/28/ocity-of-gold/ depict Coroando's Conquistadors in Arizona in 1540, introduced their horses to North America. 

Coronado Gives Thanks to the Lord in the Western United States in 1540

Coronado Thanksgiving

Thank you to Francisco Coronado that gave thanks to God our Creator in the year of our Lord 1540 in Arizona 80 years before the Pilgrims arrived in Masssachusets in 1620 after surviving their journey on the Mayflower and barely getting through the first Winter in the New World for their much more celebrated first Thanksgiving.

Coronado first thanksgiving               

Francisco Coronado and his men thank God for their safe travels to New World in 1540

Pilgrims arrival

Pilgrims in 1620 were not even born when Coronado explored Arizona and 5 interor States in 1540

As your family is gathering around the Thanksgiving dinner table this year and the story of the first 'Thanksgiving in the "New World" comes up, here is a true story to tell while enjoying Thanksgiving and thinking about the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock eating Turkey with the natives in 1620. As many of us believe, William Bradford stepped off the Mayflower as the first arrivals (not true...read on) in a New World in what is now the adjacent 48 states. This is what our children are taught in school. Hold your horses, amigo! There was an earlier visit to my state of Arizona in 1540 and four other western states to the New World 80 years before the Pilgrims arrived or were even born. 

San Xavier (White Dove of the Desert) founded in 1692

San Xavier                 

San Xavier near Tucson Arizona foundation was laid in 1692 by Father Kino

A National Historic Landmark, after smaller intial mission churches, San Xavier Mission was founded as a Catholic mission by Father Eusebio Kino in 1692. Construction of the current church began in 1783 and was completed in 1797. The oldest intact European structure in Arizona, the church's interior is filled with marvelous original statuary and mural paintings. It is a place where visitors can truly step back in time and enter an authentic 18th Century space.

Yes, it was a momentous occasion in Massachusetts. However, the Spanish explorers (also known as the "Conquistadors") led by Francisco Coronado were in Arizona in 1540, 80 years earlier. Coronado led a mighty expedition on the Coronado Trail from Arizona to what is now Kansas. As mentioned, the Pilgrims were not even born yet, let alone boarding the Mayflower. The Pilgrims never left Massachusetts and  in a wooded forest region with game and fish all around them barely could get enough food to eat. The 1,000 men in the Coronado Expedition traveled mightily from 1540 through 1542 through the interior of the now United States through Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas and then back again to their colonial headquarters in Sonora. These Conquistadors had many days of Thanksgiving and set up missions throughout the great desert southwest many of which are still standing.

Coronado Expedition Map

Per the ArizonaExperience.org, on the Coronado Expedition,  "Francisco Vázquez de Coronado led an expedition through Arizona in 1540 in search of transportable riches, rumored to be in the Seven Cities of Cibola. His trek through the area that today forms Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas began over 500 years ago.

Before any significant European settlements appeared on the Atlantic Coast of North America, men in Coronado’s expedition of Conquistadors were seeing the Grand Canyon and gazing at pueblo villages built by the Hopi and Zuni Indians. A Spanish nobleman from Salamanca, Spain, Coronado went to the Spanish colony of Mexico (then New Spain) in 1535, at the age of 25, as an assistant to New Spain’s first viceroy, Andiono de Mendoza. By 1538 he had married the daughter of a wealthy colonial treasurer and become the governor of the province of New Galicia....

Coronado Expedition...The Journe​y Begins in 1540

Coronado Expedition inArizona

Coronado was appointed leader of a major expedition to conquer the area to the north of New Spain in January, 1540, upon the return of Fray Marcos de Niza and his reports of cities of vast wealth. The ambitious Conquistador quickly amassed soldiers and supplies. The quest was funded largely by Viceroy Mendoza and Coronado's wife. Several others invested their fortunes, hoping for a return of jewels and precious metal. By February, 1540, a thousand men and hundreds of horses, mules, cattle, sheep gathered at Compostela, west of Mexico City near the Pacific Coast, in preparation for the journey north. The expedition party included approximately 240 mounted soldiers, 60 additional foot soldiers, and about 800 Indians and slaves. Fray de Niza traveled as a guide. Two ships, commanded by Hernando de Alarcón, would carry the bulk of supplies up the Guadalupe River. An advance guard of 100 men set out from Culiacán on April 22, 1540 following de Niza's route north through Sinaloa and Sonora.

Coronado Arizona

Greenlee County Arizona has Coronado on their Great Seal

The party traveled to the Spanish outpost of Corazones, located near present day Ures, Sonora on the river now known as the Rio Sonora. Coronado established a large camp and moved north up the river. The expedition is probably responsible for the name place name "Sonora." The explorers used the name ”Señora” for the part of a river just upstream from Corazones. Some scholars believe that this word was an early version of “Sonora.” The army marched a few days from the “Señora Valley” to a north flowing stream, believed to be the present-day San Pedro River. After a few days on the river, they camped at the base of some mountains at a ruin then known as Chichiticale. This ruin is an American mystery! No archaeologists have found its location, but Coronado’s travel logs mention it extensively. It is thought to be a pueblo built by an ancient American Indian tribe and abandoned by 1400. It is believed to be about thirty miles west of the present town of Safford on the edge of the Apache Reservation. The search for the ruin continues today. From Chichiticale, it is likely that Coronado took an advance guard north to the pine forests of the White Mountains. He then headed northeast to the Zuni pueblo of Hawikuh, located approximately five miles east of the modern day border between Arizona and New Mexico near Zuni Pueblo. The grand pueblo was supposedly one of seven Zuni pueblos in the area."

Yes, all of this occurred in Arizona within current day United States, before the Pilgrims were even born!

Explore the Coronado Trail Today in Arizona

Remember those first Thanksgivings in the US as you give thanks to God this year and also explore the Coronado Trail" in Arizona along Route 191 in Safford Arizona, about 150 miles east of Phoenix.

When you come to visit Arizona and fall in love with the beauty of the great desert southwest, let me help you buy a home and visit me at Arizona Homes and Land.

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Comments(2)

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Debra Leisek
Bay Realty,Inc Homer Alaska - Homer, AK

Wow! this is quite an interesting post. I have to come back an read it again so I bookmarked it.  It is interesting to see how many flaws our history taught in schools is wrong.  Have a wonderful Thanksgiving!!

Nov 28, 2024 12:38 AM
Michael Jacobs
Pasadena, CA
Pasadena And Southern California 818.516.4393

Hello Jeff - history is interesting and often a bit complicated along the way.  So is learning about life in the past as it is interpreted.    Happy Thanksgiving.  

Nov 28, 2024 03:57 AM