Daily Calendar for Thursday, November 26, 2026

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Thursday, November 26, 2026

In a 1789 proclamation, President George Washington called on the people of the United States to acknowledge God for affording them “an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness” by observing a day of thanksgiving. Devoting a day to “public thanksgiving and prayer,” as Washington called it, became a yearly tradition in many communities.

Thanksgiving became a national holiday in 1863. In that year, during the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln made his Thanksgiving Day Proclamation. He asked his fellow citizens to “to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next as a day of thanksgiving and praise …”

It was not until 1941 that Congress designated the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day, thus creating a federal holiday.

However official, the idea of a special day for giving thanks was not born of presidential proclamations. Native American harvest festivals had been celebrated for centuries, and colonial services dated back to the late 16th century. Thanksgiving Day, as we know it today, began in the early 1600s when settlers in both Massachusetts and Virginia came together to give thanks for their survival, for the fertility of their fields, and for their faith. The most widely known early Thanksgiving is that of the Pilgrims in Plymouth, Massachusetts, who feasted for 3 days with the Wampanoag people in 1621.

Turkey has become the traditional Thanksgiving fare because at one time it was a rare treat. During the 1830s, an eight- to ten-pound bird cost a day’s wages. Even though turkeys are affordable today, they still remain a celebratory symbol of bounty. In fact, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin ate roast turkey in foil packets for their first meal on the Moon.

Find more about Thanksgiving Day from history to recipes.

Born

  • Mary Walker (doctor)
  • Karl Ziegler (chemist)
  • Frances Dee (film star of the 1930s and 40s)
  • Cyril Cusack (actor)
  • Eric Sevareid (newscaster)
  • Charles Schulz (creator of Peanuts comic strip)
  • George Segal (sculptor)
  • Robert Goulet (actor)
  • Tina Turner (singer)
  • Bruce Paltrow (director & producer)
  • John McVie (musician)
  • Dale Jarrett (race car driver)
  • Natasha Bedingfield (singer)
  • Trevor Morgan (actor)

Died

  • Tommy Dorsey (bandleader)
  • Stan Berenstain (co-creator of The Berenstain Bears book series)

Events

  • The first lion was exhibited in the U.S., in Boston, MA
  • Oldest social college fraternity in continuous existence, Kappa Alpha Society, founded at Union College in Schenectady, New York
  • Public streetcar service began in New York City
  • First major football game played indoors, Chicago Coliseum, Illinois
  • National Hockey League established at Montreal, after talks that started on November 22.
  • Archeologist Howard Carter opened second doorway to tomb of Tutankhamen
  • The movie Casablanca premiered in New York City
  • France’s first satellite, Asterix 1, launched
  • Comedian Milton Berle married Lorna Adams
  • Thelma Chalifoux was the first Metis woman to become a Canadian senator (Alberta)
  • A buoy recorded a 75-foot wave off Cape Mendocino, California

Weather

  • A late-season hurricane brushed the east coast with gales and heavy rain
  • A blizzard struck North Dakota
  • 1.5 inches of rain fell in 1 minute in Barot, Guadeloupe, setting a world record

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