Yummy Food!
Fun & Games
Thanksgiving History
Parade Time!
Football Fun!
100

This orange vegetable can be mashed, made into pie, or carved into a jack-o’-lantern.

Pumpkin

100

This big Thanksgiving parade happens in a famous U.S. city with huge balloons.

New York City

100

These travelers came to America on a ship to start a new life in 1620.

Pilgrims

100

This city hosts the famous Thanksgiving parade every year.

New York City



100

On Thanksgiving, many families watch this sport on TV while eating their meal.

Football

200

This fluffy side dish is made from potatoes and usually eaten with gravy.

Potatoes 

200

Families often watch this sport on TV every Thanksgiving Day.

Football

200

This famous ship carried the Pilgrims across the ocean for 66 days.

Mayflower

200

These giant inflatable characters float above the streets during the parade.

Balloons

200

The team tries to score by carrying or throwing this to the other team’s end zone.

A football

300

This bread-like dish is cooked inside the turkey or baked separately and is soft and tasty.

Stuffing

300

Kids can make this kind of turkey by tracing their hand on paper.

Hand Turkey

300

This Native American tribe helped the Pilgrims survive their first winter and joined them at the first Thanksgiving feast.

Wampanoag

300

This parade is named after the department store that started it in 1924.

Macy's

300

The player who throws the ball to their teammates is called this.

The quarterback 

400

This red, jiggly sauce is made from a berry that grows in bogs.

Cranberry Sauce
400

This famous cartoon dog often appears as a giant balloon in the parade.

Snoopy

400

This holiday celebrates the Pilgrims and Native Americans sharing a big meal together.

Thanksgiving

400

Many of these performers join the parade, playing music and dancing.

Marching Bands

400

This is the term for when a player runs into the person with the ball to stop them.

A tackle

500

This Thanksgiving side dish is made from a root vegetable that looks like a long orange carrot.
When it’s chopped and cooked, it becomes sweet and soft—but it’s not a carrot at all.
Native Americans grew it long before the Pilgrims arrived.

Sweet Potatoes 

500

During the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, these specially trained people help guide the giant balloons through the streets by holding onto long ropes. What are they called?

Balloon Handlers

500

The first Thanksgiving happened in 1621 in this colony, where the Pilgrims had settled after their long journey on the Mayflower.

Plymouth Colony

500

Some balloons are based on cartoon characters. The first giant balloon in 1927 was this character that wears a tall hat and carries a cane.

Felix the Cat

500

On Thanksgiving Day, the NFL usually hosts games for these two “classic” teams from the Eastern U.S., who have played each other almost every year since 1934.

Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys

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