By the President
of the United States of America
Thanksgiving Proclamation
Once again the
season is at hand when, according to the ancient custom of our people, it
becomes the duty of the President to appoint a day of prayer and of
thanksgiving to God.
Year by year this
Nation grows in strength and worldly power. During the century and a quarter
that has elapsed since our entry into the circle of independent peoples we have
grown and prospered in material things to a degree never known before, and not
now known in any other country. The thirteen colonies which straggled along the
seacoast of the Atlantic and were hemmed-in but a few miles west of tidewater
by the Indian haunted wilderness, have been transformed into the mightiest
republic which the world has ever seen. Its domains stretch across the
continent from one to the other of the two greatest oceans, and it exercises
dominion alike in the arctic and tropic realms. The growth in wealth and
population has surpassed even the growth in territory. Nowhere else in the
world is the average of individual comfort and material well-being as high as
in our fortunate land.
For the very
reason that in material well-being we have thus abounded, we owe it to the
Almighty to show equal progress in moral and spiritual things. With a nation,
as with the individuals who make up a nation, material well-being is an
indispensable foundation. But the foundation avails nothing by itself. That
life is wasted, and worse than wasted, which is spent in piling, heap upon
heap, those things which minister merely to the pleasure of the body and to the
power that rests only on wealth. Upon material well-being as a foundation must
be raised the structure of the lofty life of the spirit, if this Nation is
properly to fulfil its great mission and to accomplish all that we so ardently
hope and desire. The things of the body are good; the things of the intellect
better; the best of all are the things of the soul; for, in the nation as in
the individual, in the long run it is character that counts. Let us, therefore,
as a people set our faces resolutely against evil, and with broad charity, with
kindliness and good-will toward all men, but with unflinching determination to
smite down wrong, strive with all the strength that is given us for righteousness
in public and in private life.
Now, Therefore, I,
Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, do
set apart Thursday, the 26th day of November, next, as a day of general
thanksgiving and prayer, and on that day I recommend that the people shall
cease from their daily work, and, in their homes or in their churches, meet
devoutly to thank the Almighty for the many and great blessings they have
received in the past, and to pray that they may be given the strength so to
order their lives as to deserve a continuation of these blessings in the
future.
In Witness
Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States
to be affixed.
Done at the city
of Washington this thirty-first day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand
nine hundred and eight, and of the Independence of the United States the one
hundred and thirty-third.

THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
By the President:
ALVEY A. ADEE, Acting
Secretary of State.