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The Pilgrims: A Cold War Take

November 20, 2017 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

I am a Cold War baby, born into a contentious and argumentative Irish-American family. Holidays  and Sundays always found someone storming away from the dinner table. But there were certain things we didn’t fight about — like Santa Claus and the Pilgrims. I thought they were sacred. But I learned something today when I came across a multitude of articles arguing about the meaning of Thanksgiving. Santa Claus may still be sacred, but the Pilgrims certainly aren’t.

This may not mean much to you if you don’t live in the United States, but just bear with me. Every country has its heroes and its legends and, for most Americans, Pilgrims top the list. They’re the backbone of our country.

The story I heard when I was growing up goes something like this:

Settlers arrived in the New World on the Mayflower in 1620 to escape religious persecution. They established the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts, but then went through some very hard times.

The native Americans helped them, and the colonists had a good harvest. In gratitude to God, they held the first Thanksgiving, sharing the fruits of their labor with Squanto and other Indian friends who had taught them how to hunt and farm in their new environment.

The Thanksgiving celebration became a yearly tradition soon shared with the other early colonies. As America grew and prospered, the annual holiday of thankfulness and gratitude was institutionalized, continuing until the present.

Is this the story you grew up believing? Maybe. Maybe not.

If you grew up in the second half of the Cold War you might have heard a different take. I only heard it recently. The new interpretation of Thanksgiving which has been around since at least the late 1960s goes something like this:

The early settlers at Plymouth experimented with a system of collective ownership of farmland which led to widespread famine. They eventually abandoned this system in favor of private ownership. Farmers became more productive, the harvest was bountiful, and Thanksgiving was their celebration. This makes the Pilgrims America’s first staunch anti-communists.

Sound good?

Well wait a minute! This narrative was first told through a Cold War lens, and first gained popularity at the height of the Cold War.  The actual timeline tells a different story.

In actuality, the first Thanksgiving was held in 1621 two years before the Pilgrims shifted to private ownership.  At the time of the first Thanksgiving, there was a system of collective ownership in the colony known as the “common course,” an agreement that all agriculture should be a collective, community undertaking.

The “common course” was abandoned in 1623, two years after the first Thanksgiving celebration. At that time, because of a corn shortage, the colonists “began to think how they might raise” more.  It was decided, according to their governor, William Bradford, that “they should set corn every man for his own particular, and in that regard trust to themselves.” Bradford “assigned to every family a parcel of land,” ending the communal cultivation of corn.

So what’s the real story?

I think the best way to find out would be to plow through a couple of books. The most definitive would be Governor William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation, first published in full in 1856. The most popular version of this writing, though, was edited by the historian Samuel Eliot Morison in 1952. I haven’t read the governor’s journal, so I can’t expound on his story, but I do know that Morison’s version was published during a time period when Americans were becoming extremely suspicious of the Soviets and their economic system. So it’s fair to say that the work was edited through a Cold War lens. But don’t take my word for it.

Richard Pickering, a historian of early America and Deputy Director of Plimoth Plantation, a museum dedicated to keeping the Pilgrims’ story alive says:

The Challenges of the cold war and dealing with Russia are reflected in the text . . . .

William Hogeland, the author of Inventing American History agrees. He says:

Across the political spectrum, there’s a tendency to grab a hold of some historical incident and yoke it to a current agenda. It doesn’t always mean there’s no connection, but often things are presented as historical first, rather than as part of the agenda first.

Another book you might want to read is Making Haste From Babylon: The Mayflower Pilgrims and Their World (2010) by Nick Bunker. I haven’t read this book either. So I can’t really answer the questions: What is historical fact? What is political agenda?

But I have figured out that the political ‘right’ in the United States has its own version of Thanksgiving, a revisionist history that’s very different from the narrative that I learned as a kid in my very conservative community. Instead of thankfulness and family, this group’s focus is on the idea that Thanksgiving is a celebration of the pilgrims’ abandonment of socialism in favor of free enterprise.

Various conservative and libertarian personalities have weighed in on this topic, people like Henry Hazlitt in 1968, and, later, George F. Will and Rush Limbaugh. Their interpretations are summed up in the last paragraph of Richard J. Maybury’s piece in the blog Mises Daily called The Great Thanksgiving Hoax. Maybury argues:

. . . the real meaning of Thanksgiving, deleted from the official story, is: Socialism does not work; the one and only source of abundance is free markets, and we thank God we live in a country where we can have them.

What do you think? Were the Pilgrims socialists? Or were they capitalists? What do the Pilgrims mean to you?

My answer to these questions comes quite easily. I like to pretend like I’m in grade school again in Mt. Healthy, Ohio, at the height of the Cold War. I’m marching down the aisle of my school auditorium, my arms full of canned goods, belting out the hymn we always sang near Thanksgiving:

Come ye thankful people come —

raise the song of harvest home;

all is safely gathered in,

ere the winter storms begin.

God our maker doth provide

for our wants to be supplied;

come to God’s own temple, come,

raise the song of harvest home.

The text of this hymn was written in 1810, long before before the First Red Scare and the later Cold War. It was also written before the earliest publication of William Bradford’s journal. For now, it’s the interpretation that I favor. But I may think differently after this Thanksgiving when I finally have a chance to watch the PBS film by Ken Burns called The Pilgrims, a two-hour documentary that supposedly endeavors to tell the true story of the early colonists. Will the documentary settle the arguments or will it just be another piece of revisionist history? Watch it and decide.

 

Featured Photograph by Henry Zbyszynski on Flickr

Filed Under: Cold War News

A Cold War Halloween

October 26, 2017 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

Unfortunately, this issue of Cold War Magazine is no longer available. The article 9 Commie Mummies is available on the blog. Read it  here. 

The latest issue of Cold War Magazine has just been published. Highlights include:

Cold War Halloween by Sally Edelstein: Traipsing from house to house, we fell in with a coterie of trick or treaters consisting of Zorro, Frankenstein, an army nurse and a Spaceman toting a white pillowcase bulging with candy corn, tootsie pops and pixies, who insisted on ringing the bell on every front door.

Lenin’s Tomb: A Halloween Visit by This Ruthless World: Here is a perfect story for Halloween: the story of how I got to see Lenin’s mummy on the occasion of being inducted into the Young Pioneers.

What to do with Zombie Stalin: Sean Munger writes about about Stalin’s corpse–the “zombie Stalin” that was, despite the great generalissimo’s death, still hanging around uncomfortably nearly eight years later.

9 Commie Mummies by Cold War Studies: 

What happens to a Communist leader when they die? Well, they’re mummified of course. What does that entail? Well, it’s been the stuff of Halloween Scares for hundreds of years.

Filed Under: Cold War News

Cold War Toys And The Rise of Conspicuous Consumption

December 8, 2016 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

Cold War Studies has the Christmas spirit early this year. WooHoo! So we’ve decided to bring you a series of 6 posts that are all about Christmas during the Cold War. The first is on the growth of the toy industry in the United States during the half century long conflict. But for those of you who are more interested in the Soviet Union, no worries. Our second post will be all about Ded Maroz, the Soviet version of Santa Claus.  Enjoy!

Toy Stores Flourish

Early Cold War toys tell us a lot about the beginning years of the half-century conflict between the United States and the USSR. During this timeframe, ideology permeated all aspects and objects of daily life. Even toys! After all, toys were one way that parents could communicate the important issues in their world to their children. In the United States, toys contributed to the consumer culture of the early Cold War years, passing on the values of prosperity to the next generation.

Toy stores flourished as the toy industry became big business when the economy revived after World War II. In 1939, census takers counted 821 workplaces where toys were made. By 1947, they recorded 2,198 such locations. In the United States, toys contributed to the consumer culture of the early Cold War years, passing on the values of prosperity to the next generation.

Brand Names Matter

Parents could buy child-sized shopping carts so that their children could “practice shopping,” filling the carts with exact (but empty) boxes of SOS scouring pads and Kellog’s Corn Flakes as well as Campbell soup cans. The “goods” reinforced advertisers’ messages that brand names mattered — no generics were allowed.

Shopping board games were also popular. Milton Bradley promoted the “Acme Checkout Game” with markers in the shape of supermarket carts. Players moved around the board through the aisles of merchandise, losing turns in long checkout lines. That this type of play reinforced the American dream was clearly enunciated by Richard Nixon at the 1959 Kitchen Debate with the Soviet Union’s Nikita Khruschev, Nixon pointed to America’s growing consumer economy as a sign of American strength and democracy, asserting that the politics of freedom and democracy were embodied in the ability of American consumers to buy freely and to choose among a variety of diverse brands and products.

Photograph by James Vaughan (Flickr)Photograph by James Vaughan (Flickr)

The Suburbs Dominate

Many of the era’s toys were focused on the family centered ideology that had taken hold during the post war period. Much of the pretend grocery shopping took place in America’s new suburban communities. The suburbs symbolized two aspects of Cold War domestic ideology: the consumption ethic and the glorification of the nuclear family. Suburban homes were new and builders — encouraged by government policies — had designed them specifically for family life.

suburbanhousePhotograph by Robert Couse-Baker (Flickr)

Life in the suburbs absolutely required at least one family car. There had been no investment in public transportation. Instead, the state and federal highway system had been expanded to connect suburbs with their nearby cities. Not only were cars necessary, they were an important symbol of status and buying power. American car manufacturers created new models annually and toy cars followed suit, offering as many choices as the real thing.

Photograph by Joe Haupt (Flickr)
Photograph by Joe Haupt (Flickr)

The Family Room

So far as the home was concerned, the “family room” became an increasingly important feature, crystallizing the Cold War’s family ideal. The term was first coined in 1946, referring to a space designed for informal family interaction or “togetherness.”

familyroom

Cold War togetherness required a room of its own because space was needed for all sorts of games and equipment. The family room of the 1950s spotlighted the primacy of children and their play. And, of course, there were plenty of Cold War toys to play with. We’ll talk about lots of those in coming posts.

Cover photograph courtesy of Anne (Flickr)

Filed Under: Cold War News

CUBA ISSUES OF COLD WAR MAGAZINE

March 22, 2016 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

cwmagbeforepost

To honor President Obama’s historic visit to the island of Cuba, Cold War Magazine has published two special issues. They are both in the iTunes store now, and I hope you’ll take a look. The issues are free, and are easy to read on your iPad or iPhone. Follow this link to find out more about Cold War Magazine.

The first issue is titled America in Cuba (Before the Revolution). Articles include:

COLONIAL CUBA: HERE COME THE AMERICANS

THE CANNON FIRING CEREMONY

THE US OCCUPATION

BEFORE THE COLD WAR: THE 1940s

CUBA IN THE 1950s

1958: THE ECONOMY NEARS COLLAPSE

AMERICAN BUSINESS IN CUBA: 1898-1959

CUBA’S CAPITALIST LEGACY: 1945-1959

granma_party_girlspost

The second issue is titled Cuba in a Nutshell. Articles include:

CUBA’S COLD WAR CAPITAL: HAVANA

CUBA IN A NUTSHELL: PART 1

CUBA IN A NUTSHELL: PART 2

COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE IN OLD HAVANA

HARSH US POLICY

Both issues are chock full of great information. Why not take a look? As I said before, THEY’RE FREE!

 

 

 

Filed Under: Cold War News

Cold War Music = War Songs

February 11, 2016 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

issue3post

Welcome to the Music Issue of Cold War Magazine.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE MAGAZINE

This month’s issue covers the popular music of the Cold War, starting with the war in Korea and ending with the fall of the Soviet Union and the collapse of the Berlin Wall. There’s lots to listen to, so be sure to carry your earbuds with you.

Just a note of caution, though. This issue of Cold War Magazine works best on your laptop or CD. We’ve had reports of crashes, especially on older iPads. This is because there are lots of embedded You Tube videos, so it uses a lot of memory. You can listen to the videos as you go, or you can access the playlists at the end of most articles. Most of the playlists are on the Cold War Studies You Tube Channel. Access it here.

Cold War Magazine is proud to be all about Cold War history, culture, and politics. Many people think that the Cold War was just a half century confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union. But it was really much more than an international conflict. Those of us who lived it know that the Cold War was a “state of mind,” encompassing every aspect of life from fashion and decor to bubblegum cards and comic books.

Here at Cold War Magazine, we’re all about Cold War fun! And we’re easy to read. Subscriptions are free at present, but we may charge for subscriptions in the future. So why not get on board now?

SUBSCRIBE TO COLD WAR MAGAZINE

Filed Under: Cold War News

COLD WAR WEEKLY NEWS SUMMARY #1

October 16, 2010 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

Cuba Tourism

From The Huffington Post:

The U.S. remains entrenched in an archaic and nonsensical de facto cold war with Cuba.

During the actual Cold War, the U.S. never banned its citizens from visiting the Soviet Union or China.

Is Cuba such a dire threat to the U.S. and Americans that the U.S. should deprive Americans of the right to visit that country?

For the top five reasons we should demand an immediate end to the U.S. government’s Cuba travel ban click here.

From The New Yorker:

For The Tea Party’s Cold War Roots by Sean Wilentz click here.

From YouTube:

A recent Albuquerque City Council resolution about the city’s massive nuclear weapons stash is stirring up fears long associated with the Cold War era. To watch the video click here.

From The Globe and Mail:

It’s a new Cold War and once again, Canada is on the front line. There are no remote air bases or Arctic radar stations, just flickering screens in offices on Bay Street, Wall Street and the City of London where people watch the precipitous fall of the U.S. dollar and the rise of the Australian, Brazilian and Canadian currencies. To read the article click here.

From RIA Novosti:

The cold war is long gone but its legacy is having enormous influence  on the present system of international relations. Are Russia and the USA doomed to remain potential enemies?

To read the full article click here.

From GIZMODO Australia:

Bunker-42 was built during the Cold War and was a classified bunker equipped with everything necessary in case …

To read the full article click here.

Filed Under: Cold War News

WELCOME

March 10, 2010 by Lisa Reynolds Wolfe

Welcome to my new blog: COLD WAR STUDIES.  The blog is now under development and will be released in stages over the next several months.  In the meantime, I would love to get to know you. Let me know your needs, the kind of information you’re looking for, and how I can help.  Please send your comments.

I will be releasing content 2 or 3 times a week while we’re under construction. Check back often to see what’s new.

Filed Under: Cold War News

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A Cold War historian, Lisa holds a Ph.D. in Politics from New York University and a MS in Policy Analysis and Public Management from SUNY Stony Brook.

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