The first Thanksgiving took place on this year
When was 1621?
This is the time most Americans serve Thanksgiving dinner.
What is 3:00 PM?
This is the average size of an adult turkey.
What is 15lbs?
This was the first year of the Macy's Parade.
What was 1924?
This main dish was not served at the first Thanksgiving?
What is turkey?
This was how long the first Thanksgiving lasted.
What was three days long?
This is the name for the day after Thanksgiving.
What is Black Friday?
This is the record for heaviest turkey.
What is 86lbs?
This is the number of people that worked at the first Macy's Parade.
What is 400?
This silverware item was not used at the first Thanksgiving?
What is a fork?
This was the total number of people at the first Thanksgiving.
What is 102 people?
This is the year that Thanksgiving became a national holiday.
What is 1863?
This is the average number of feathers on an adult turkey.
What is 3,500?
This was the first year the Macy's Parade was televised.
What is 1932?
Balloon were not used during the first Macy's Parade. This was used instead.
What are live animals?
This was the governor of the Pilgrims.
Who was William Bradford?
This is the percentage of Americans that eat turkey for Thanksgiving dinner.
What is 91%?
This is the number of turkeys sold on each year on Thanksgiving.
What is 280 million?
At 19 degrees, this year was the coldest in the Parade's history.
What was 2018?
The gang in the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving did not serve a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. They served this instead.
What is toast, popcorn, pretzel sticks and jelly beans?
This was the name of the tribe that joined the Pilgrims in the first Thanksgiving?
Who were the Wampanoag Indians?
This is the number of tables that serve green bean casserole on Thanksgiving.
What is 42 million?
This is the color of turkey eggs.
What is tan?
This balloon has floated in the more Parades than any other.
What is the Snoopy balloon?
The term "Pilgrim" was first used in the 1800s. This is what the Pilgrims actually called themselves.
What is the term "saints"?