ACES Radio Live
Browse By Month

Like This?
Subscribe by email:

- Thanksgiving Special this week on ACES Radio Live Sent Thursday, November 26, 2009 View as plaintext
This Week on...
ACES Radio Live
Hello
 First things first... on behalf of my lovely wife Annette, my awesome co-host Mr. Troy Dooly
and all of the members of both of our families
we would like to wish you and your family a
very safe and Happy Thanksgiving and we
would also like to invite you to give us a call
this Friday andbe a part of our show as we all
give thanks for the many awesome things in our lives that we are thankful for!!!
To Call In & Be Part of the Show
or to just listen in on your phone
 
Call (347) 843-4270

CLICK HERE
TO
LISTEN LIVE

 

November 27, 2009

This week on ACES Radio Live Troy and I will be discussing all the wonderful things in our lives that are Thankful for - Join us and tell us what you are thankful for in your life.

So, what is Thanksgiving? The definition below is one of the best that I have ever found...

Thanksgiving Day , legal holiday in the U.S., first celebrated in early colonial times in New England. The actual origin, however, is probably the harvest festivals that are traditional in many parts of the world Festivals and Feasts. After the first harvest was completed by the Plymouth colonists in 1621, Governor William Bradford proclaimed a day of thanksgiving and prayer, shared by all the colonists and neighboring Native Americans. The Pilgrims of Plymouth Rock held their Thanksgiving in 1621 as a three day "thank you" celebration to the leaders of the Wampanoag Indian tribe and their families for teaching them the survival skills they needed to make it in the New World. It was their good fortune that the tradition of the Wampanoags was to treat any visitor to their homes with a share of whatever food the family had, even if supplies were low. It was also an amazing stroke of luck that one of the Wampanoag, Tisquantum or Squanto, had become close friends with a British explorer, John Weymouth, and had learned the Pilgrim's language in his travels to England with Weymouth.

After the first New England Thanksgiving the custom spread throughout the colonies, but each region chose its own date. In 1789 George Washington, the first president of the United States, proclaimed November 26 a day of Thanksgiving.

Thanksgiving day continued to be celebrated in the United States on different days in different states until Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey's Lady's Book, decided to do something about it. For more than 30 years she wrote letters to the governors and presidents asking them to make Thanksgiving Day a national holiday.

Finally, in 1863, President Lincoln issued a White House proclamation calling on the "whole American people" wherever they lived to unite "with one heart and one voice" in observing a special day of thanksgiving. Setting apart the last Thursday of November for the purpose, the President urged prayers in the churches and in the homes to "implore the interposition of the almighty had to heal the wounds of the nations and to restore it...to full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and union." He also states that they express heartfelt thanks for the "blessing of fruitful fields and healthful skies."

In 1939 President Franklin D. Roosevelt advanced Thanksgiving Day one week. However, since some states used the new date and others the old, it was changed again 2 years later. Thanksgiving Day is now celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November.

The first formal celebration of Thanksgiving in North America was held by an English explorer, Martin Frobisher, who attempted to establish an English settlement on Baffin Island, after failing to discover a northern passage to the Orient in 1576. Canada established the second Monday in October as a national holiday, "a day of general thanksgiving," in 1957.

In 1817 New York State adopted Thanksgiving Day as an annual custom. By the middle of the 19th century many other states also celebrated a Thanksgiving Day. In 1863 President Abraham Lincoln appointed a national day of thanksgiving. Since then each president has issued a Thanksgiving Day proclamation, usually designating the fourth Thursday of each November as the holiday.

Why Turkey

The turkey tradition was really pushed by Benjamin Franklin, who wanted to make it the United States national symbol because it is a quick runner, wary, with sharp eyesight, and exhibited a regal stance, at least to Franklin. While the bald eagle nudged out the wild turkey for our official national symbol, Norman Rockwell has probably made the image of the family Thanksgiving turkey even more famous, and certainly more mouth watering.

Tradition

The American traditions of Thanksgiving revolve around a huge and lavish meal, usually with Turkey as the centerpiece. For those who do not like Turkey, a Roast or Prime Rib is common. As tradition has it in most families, a special prayer of thanks precedes the meal. In many homes, family members will each mention something they are very thankful for.

Thanksgiving is a time for families to create traditions and memories that last a lifetime.

We are honored to pay tribute for all the things that we are thankful for on the show this week.

Please feel free to call in and be a part of the show if you have a question for our guest by calling the number below

(347) 843-4270


 

Also on the show this week we are going to be talking about Troy's New Book
The Secret Chronicles of MLM.


Click Here --> --> ACES Radio Live to visit
our website and catch the show.

To learn more about getting involved in the network marketing industry, how to become more successful with your current business or to learn more about any of our fantastic guests please feel free to contact Troy or myself directly.

Remember, success is a choice--here's to yours.

Warm Regards and God Bless,

Jim Gillhouse

PS   If you are new to the industry of Network Marketing or have NEW people on your Team this is going to be a show that you Do Not want to miss and more importantly... You're going to want to tell everyone you know to listen to this show.
 
By the way if you haven't read the book Go-For-No - We Strongly Recommend it and you can get it by clicking on the link below.
 


Insights From The    MLM Help Desk

  Thank You

We Appreciate You, we Value both Your Time and Your Support

Please feel free to share this message with anyone you feel could benefit from it and remember... ACES Radio Live is a show dedicated to helping you to maximize you potential within the Home Based Business Industry.

 

ACES Radio Live is on
LIVE
Every Friday Evening

Noon-1:00 PM Hawaii
3:00-4:00 PM Pacific
4:00-5:00 PM Mountain
5:00-6:00 PM Central
6:00-7:00 PM Eastern

You can also call us at
(347) 843-4270
if you have questions or to listen live by phone while
we're "On The Air"


Links


ACES Radio Live

ACES Radio Live Squidoo Lens
The Home Based Business Radio Show - With Tom Chenault

The MLM Help Desk

The MLMIA
The DRA


Address



All of our shows are now available to be downloaded from iTunes from our Blog Talk Radio Link so you can listen to every episode of our show when and where you you the time to take advantage of learning something from all of our guests.
If you use
twitter - then
we invite you
to
check this out
and get it for yourself
ASAP
 
� 2008-2009 ACES Radio Live. All rights reserved