{"id":55962,"date":"2019-11-29T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-11-29T12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-gratitude-for-our-libraries-museums-and-historians\/"},"modified":"2019-11-29T03:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-11-29T12:00:00","slug":"opinion-gratitude-for-our-libraries-museums-and-historians","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-gratitude-for-our-libraries-museums-and-historians\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: Gratitude for our libraries, museums and historians"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the time of year when America enjoys turkey, football, floats, family reunions and Black Friday shopping. The “first Thanksgiving,” however, was neither a feast nor a holiday, but a simple gathering.<\/p>\n
Following the Mayflower’s arrival at Plymouth Rock on Dec. 11, 1620, the Pilgrims lost over half of their original 102 colonists. Those who survived the bitter winter were helped by the Wampanoag Indians. By some accounts, in celebration, a traditional English harvest festival, brought the Pilgrims and natives together in a “thanksgiving” observance.<\/p>\n
But Thanksgiving wasn’t a well-defined tradition until 1863. In the middle of the bloodiest war in American history, President Abraham Lincoln formally established the holiday — for past blessings and for help and healing for those in need.<\/p>\n
Thanksgiving has undergone several transitions — from its original expression of gratitude to over-commercialization to, more recently, its repudiation by those believing it represents an insensitive stereotype of Native Americans.<\/p>\n
Yet, nothing about human history is ever as simple as it appears. Recognition of what we did wrong, as well as what we did right, is part of understanding the nuance and complexity of history.<\/p>\n
While Alaska has a relatively short history as a territory and state, there is much to learn about our own founding — as a state and a community.<\/p>\n
Juneau is blessed with a variety of historical sources supported through our community’s library system and the Juneau-Douglas City Museum.<\/p>\n
Perhaps our most iconic historian, Robert N. DeArmond (1911-2010), spent 70 years documenting Juneau’s history.<\/p>\n
Praised as the dean of Alaska historians and newspapermen, DeArmond was a prolific writer. Much of his research documenting the history of the Gastineau Channel area now forms a searchable online database hosted by the Juneau-Douglas City Museum.<\/p>\n