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Thanksgiving : A Gift of Holiday Recollections : Her Rich Reward in Helping Poor

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Compiled by Times Staff Writers DENNIS McLELLAN, DOUG BROWN, BENJAMIN EPSTEIN and LYNN SMITH

They had survived their first raw winter in the new land--a harrowing time of scarce food, hard work and sickness that killed nearly half of the tiny band of 102 Pilgrims who had settled in Plymouth, Mass.

And so they gathered in the autumn of 1621, having been befriended by their Indian neighbors and blessed by a bountiful harvest, to rejoice and give thanks, as was their custom, with a harvest festival.

Three-hundred sixty-four years later, the spirit of that first New England Thanksgiving lives on.

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It’s a theme with few variations: An annual reunion of family and friends, a festive occasion permeated with the tastes and smells of good things to eat.

But, as years go by, it is the memories of past Thanksgivings and the people we shared them with that help give special meaning to the annual rite of fall.

To find out what significance the national holiday has played in their lives, prominent Orange County residents were asked to share their thoughts on Thanksgivings past and present.

“Every Thanksgiving has been my most memorable,” said Sister Marie Therese, executive director of the Lestonnac Free Clinic in Orange. “Every year, we give baskets to the poor.”

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