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National Native American Heritage Month has long tradition

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Written by: US Census Bureau
Published: 27 November 2025

National Native American Heritage Month is commemorated in November, and the effort to establish it began more than a century ago.

The first American Indian Day was celebrated in May 1916 in New York. The event culminated an effort by Red Fox James, a member of the Blackfeet Nation, who rode across the United States on horseback seeking approval from 24 state governments to designate a day to honor American Indians. 

In 1990, more than seven decades later, President George H.W. Bush signed a joint congressional resolution designating the month of November National American Indian Heritage Month. 

Similar proclamations have been issued every year since 1994 to recognize what is now called National Native American Heritage Month. 

This Facts for Features presents statistics about the American Indian or Alaska Native population, one of the six major race categories defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.

The following facts are possible thanks to responses to the U.S. Census Bureau’s surveys. 

“We appreciate the public’s cooperation as we continuously measure America’s people, places and economy,” the agency said.

Did You Know?

7.7 million
The nation’s American Indian or Alaska Native population alone or in combination with other race groups in 2024.

9.0 million
The projected American Indian or Alaska Native population alone or in combination with other race groups on July 1, 2060. It would constitute 2.5% of the total population.

574
The number of federally recognized Indian tribes in 2025.

325
The number of distinct, federally recognized American Indian reservations in 2025, including federal reservations and off-reservation trust lands. 

221
The number of Alaska Native village statistical areas in 2025.

123,404
The number of single-race American Indian or Alaska Native veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces in 2024.

2,356
The number of residents of Lake County, California, who identify as American Indian or Alaska Native alone, based on the American Community Survey.

Thompson appointed to Democrats' Litigation Task Force

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 27 November 2025

Rep. Mike Thompson (CA-04) has been appointed to House Democrats’ Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group. 

Chaired by Assistant Leader Joe Neguse, members of the Task Force are working to develop comprehensive legislative, oversight and legal strategies to uphold the constitution, protect the rights of the American people, and challenge the president’s unlawful actions in court. 

Rep. Thompson was tapped by Democratic leadership to join the task force because of his strong record of service to our democracy, first in combat and now in public office. The task force is currently supporting dozens of lawsuits and bills. 

“Since the day this president took office, I have committed myself to fighting his unlawful actions from every angle: in Congress, in the courts, and in the court of public opinion. That’s why I’m honored Assistant Leader Neguse asked me to join the Democrats’ Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group,” said Thompson. “I went to war to fight for our democracy. Now, I’m working daily to fight to protect our free and fair elections, preserve Americans’ rights and uphold our values as a nation. The Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group is doing incredible work and I’m glad to be joining them to carry on their important efforts.” 

“Since assuming office, President Trump has issued a series of executive orders and administrative actions that are unconstitutional and have imposed dire consequences on everyday Americans across the country. His actions warrant a decisive response, which is why House Democrats’ Litigation Task Force will continue to work relentlessly to develop comprehensive legislative, oversight, and legal strategies — to vindicate the constitution, and the rights of the American people. And I’m deeply grateful to Rep. Thompson for his leadership, commitment, and willingness to serve as a member of the Task Force,” said House Assistant Minority Leader Joe Neguse.

“Mike is a seriously skilled legislator and a nonstop fighter for the American people. The task force is confident that he will bring that same fighting spirit to our efforts to counter the Trump Administration's lawlessness and stand up for the rule of law every day in court," said Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group Co-Chair, Rep. Jamie Raskin.

Rep. Thompson said he is working full-time to combat the Administration's unlawful actions by every means available. 

A combat veteran and Purple Heart recipient, Thompson has a long history of service to our democracy and to our community. 

Democratic leadership selected him for this position on the task force due to his history of service and record fighting back effectively against the Trump administration.

Since the President took office, House Democrats have adopted an all-hands-on-deck approach to combating the litany of unlawful and unconstitutional executive orders and agency actions coming from the Trump administration. As part of this effort, Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries established the Rapid Response Task Force and Litigation Working Group to ensure Democrats do everything in their power to protect and defend everyday Americans. 

The Task Force is chaired by Assistant Democratic Leader Joe Neguse, and co-chaired by Appropriations Committee Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro, Oversight Committee Ranking Member Robert Garcia, and Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin. 

Examples of work the task force is undergoing include: 

Litigation: Task force members have come together to file amicus briefs in lawsuits aiming to protect the Department of Education, oppose the president’s sweeping tariffs, reverse unlawful cuts to National Institutes of Health biomedical and public health research grants, and challenge the Presidents’ unlawful attempt to end birthright citizenship, and more. 

Legislation: Members of the task force have introduced federal legislation to: prevent special government employees from receiving federal contracts and grants, reinstate veterans who have been removed or dismissed from federal employment without cause, prevent the president from declaring an emergency to enact import tariffs without Congressional approval, prohibit unlawful access to the Treasury Department payment systems, and more.  

Thompson represents California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties. 

How the Plymouth Pilgrims took over Thanksgiving – and who history left behind

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Written by: Thomas Tweed, University of Notre Dame
Published: 27 November 2025

‘The First Thanksgiving, 1621,’ by Jean L. G. Ferris. Library of Congress
Nine in 10 Americans gather around a table to share food on Thanksgiving. At this polarizing moment, anything that promises to bring Americans together warrants our attention.

But as a historian of religion, I feel obliged to recount how popular interpretations of Thanksgiving also have pulled us apart.

Communal rituals of giving thanks have a longer history in North America, and it was only around the turn of the 20th century that most people in the U.S. came to associate Thanksgiving with Plymouth “Pilgrims” and generic “Indians” sharing a historic meal.

The emphasis on the Pilgrims’ 1620 landing and 1621 feast erased a great deal of religious history and narrowed conceptions of who belongs in America – at times excluding groups such as Native Americans, Catholics and Jews.

Farming faiths and harvest festivals

The usual Thanksgiving depiction overlooks Indigenous rituals that give thanks, including harvest festivals.

The Wampanoag, who shared food with the Pilgrims in 1621, continue to celebrate the cranberry harvest, and similar feasts were held long before Columbus sailed and Pilgrims landed.

As I note in my 2025 book, “Religion in the Lands That Became America,” for instance, celebrants gathered for a communal feast in the late 11th century in the 50-acre plaza of Cahokia. That Native city, across the river from present-day St. Louis, was the largest population center north of Mexico before the American Revolution.

An overhead view of a grassy green area with several raised mounds.
The St. Louis, Mo., skyline is seen beyond Monks Mound at Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site in Collinsville, Ill., on July 11, 2019. Daniel Acker for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Cahokians and their neighbors came in late summer or early autumn to give deities thanks, smoke ritual tobacco and eat special food – not corn, their dietary staple, but symbolically significant animals such as white swans and white-tailed deer. So, those Cahokians attended a thanks-giving feast five centuries before the Pilgrims’ harvest-time meal.

‘Days of Thanksgiving’

The usual depiction also de-emphasizes the tradition of officials announcing special “Days of Thanksgiving,” a practice familiar to the Pilgrims and their descendants.

The Pilgrims, who settled in what is now Plymouth, Massachusetts, were separatist Puritans who had denounced the Catholic elements that remained in the Protestant Church of England. They first sought to form their own “purified” church and community in Holland. After about 12 years, many of them moved again, crossing the Atlantic in 1620. The Pilgrims’ colony southeast of Boston was gradually absorbed into Massachusetts Bay Colony, founded in 1630 by a larger group of Puritans who did not split from England’s official church.

As historians have noted, Puritan ministers in Massachusetts’ state-sanctioned Congregational Church didn’t just speak on Sundays. Now and then they also gave special thanksgiving sermons, which expressed gratitude for what the community considered divine interventions, from military victory to epidemic relief.

The practice continued and spread. During the American Revolution, for instance, the Continental Congress declared a Day of Thanksgiving to commemorate the victory at Saratoga in 1777. President James Madison announced Days of Thanksgiving during the War of 1812. Leaders of the United States and the Confederate states did the same during the Civil War.

This tradition influenced Americans such as Sarah Hale, who called for a national Thanksgiving holiday. A magazine editor and poet best known for “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” she successfully pitched the idea to Abraham Lincoln in 1863.

Harvest feast of 1621

Many Americans’ view of “The First Thanksgiving” resembles the scene depicted in a Jean Ferris painting by that name. Finished around 1915, it is similar to another popular image painted around the same time, Jennie Augusta Brownscombe’s “The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth.”

A painting in muted colors of a small group of people in plain clothing seated around a table outside, with a log cabin in the background.
‘The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth’ by Jennie A. Brownscombe. Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal/Wikimedia Commons

Both images distort the historical context and misrepresent Indigenous attendees from the nearby Wampanoag Confederacy. The Native leaders wear headdresses from Plains tribes, and there are too few Indigenous attendees.

Only one eyewitness account survives: a 1621 letter from the Pilgrim Edward Winslow. He reported that the Wampanoag’s leader, Massasoit, brought 90 men. That means, some historians suggest, the shared meal was as much a diplomatic event marking an alliance as an agricultural feast celebrating a harvest.

Ferris’ painting also implies that the English provided the food. Plymouth residents brought “fowl,” as Winslow recalled – probably wild turkey – but the Wampanoag added five killed deer. Even the harvest of “Indian corn” depended on Native aid. Tisquantum or Squanto, the lone survivor of the village that the Pilgrims called Plymouth, had offered lifesaving advice about planting as well as diplomacy.

The image’s cheerful scene also obscures how death had destabilized the area. The Pilgrims lost almost half their group to famine or exposure that first winter. After earlier European contact, however, even larger numbers of the Wampanoag had died in a regional epidemic that raged between 1616-1619. That’s why the Pilgrims found Squanto’s village abandoned, and why both communities were open to the alliance he brokered.

Pilgrims’ primacy

The Pilgrims were latecomers to the Thanksgiving table. Lincoln’s 1863 proclamation, published in Harper’s Monthly, mentioned “the blessing of fruitful fields,” but not the Pilgrims. Nor were Pilgrims depicted in the magazine’s illustrated follow-up. The page showed town and country, as well as emancipated slaves, celebrating the feast day by praying at “the Union altar.” For years before and after the proclamation, in fact, many Southerners resisted Thanksgiving, which they saw as a Northern, abolitionist holiday.

Several small black-and-white illustrations around a larger one of a woman with long hair and a star headdress kneeling in prayer.
This ‘Thanksgiving Day’ illustration, made by cartoonist Thomas Nast, commemorated its first celebration as a U.S. holiday. Syracuse University Art Museum

The Pilgrims’ absence makes sense, since they were not the first Europeans to land on North America’s eastern coast – or to give thanks there. Spanish Catholics had founded St. Augustine in 1565. According to an eyewitness account, the Spanish leader asked a priest to celebrate Mass on Sept. 8, 1565, which Native Americans attended, and “ordered that the Indians be fed.”

Two decades later, an English group had tried and failed to establish a colony on Roanoke Island, North Carolina – including a Jewish engineer. The English had more success when they settled Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. A commander leading a new group to Virginia was instructed to mark “a day of Thanksgiving to Almighty God” in 1619, two years before the Plymouth meal.

But over the years, Plymouth’s Pilgrims still moved slowly toward the center of the national holiday – and America’s founding narrative.

In 1769, Plymouth residents promoted their town by organizing a “Forefathers’ Day.” In 1820 the Protestant politician Daniel Webster gave a speech commemorating the bicentennial of the landing at Plymouth Rock and praising the Pilgrims’ arrival as “the first footsteps of civilized man” in the wilderness. Then in an 1841 volume, “Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers,” a Boston minister reprinted the 1621 eyewitness account and described the shared harvest meal as “the first Thanksgiving.”

Rising immigration

Between 1880 and 1920, the Pilgrims emerged as the central characters in national narratives about both Thanksgiving Day and America’s origin. It was no coincidence that these years were the peak of immigration to the U.S., and many Americans saw the new immigrants as inferior to those who had landed at Plymouth Rock.

An illustration in faded colors of a group of men and women standing, a bit disoriented, on a hill beside the ocean.
A late-1800s depiction of the Plymouth landing, published by the printmaking business Currier and Ives. Mabel Brady Garvan Collection/Yale University Art Gallery

Irish Catholics already had a presence in Boston when the “Pilgrim Fathers” volume appeared in 1841, and more came after the Irish potato famine later that decade. Boston’s foreign-born population increased further as poverty and politics pushed Italian Catholics and Russian Jews to seek a better life in America.

The same was happening in many northern cities, and some Protestants were alarmed. In an 1885 bestseller called “Our Country,” a Congregational Church minister warned that “the glory is departing from many a New England village, because men, alien in blood, in religion, and in civilization, are taking possession of homes in which were once reared the descendants of the Pilgrims.”

During the 300th anniversary of the Pilgrims’ landing and harvest meal, celebrated in 1920 and 1921, the federal government issued commemorative stamps and coins. Officials staged pageants, and politicians gave speeches. About 30,000 people gathered in Plymouth, for instance, to hear President Warren Harding and Vice President Calvin Coolidge praise the “Pilgrim Spirit.”

Soon nativist worries about the newcomers, especially Catholics and Jews, led Coolidge to sign the Immigration Act of 1924, which would largely close America’s borders for four decades.

Americans kept telling the Pilgrim story after U.S. immigration policy became more welcoming in 1965, and many will tell it again next year as we celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary. Understood in its full context, it’s a story worth telling. But we might use caution since, as history reminds us, stories about the country’s spiritual past can either bring us together or pull us apart.The Conversation

Thomas Tweed, Professor Emeritus of American Studies and History, University of Notre Dame

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

California joins lawsuit over federal government’s cuts to homeless housing funding

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Written by: Lingzi Chen
Published: 26 November 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — As Thanksgiving approaches, the federal government has issued significant cuts to homeless housing funding, prompting 20 states — including California — to file a lawsuit on Tuesday to block the move.

On Nov. 14, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, issued a notice of funding opportunity for its Continuum of Care, or CoC program, which is designed to support nonprofits and local governments in efforts to end homelessness.

The new policy caps the share of funds that can be used for permanent housing, a change that could put an estimated 170,000 people at risk of homelessness nationwide.  

Last year, California CoCs spent about 90% of its total $683 million in funding on permanent housing projects. Under the new policy, only up to 30% can be used for permanent supportive housing and rapid rehousing. 

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta, along with a multistate coalition of 20 states, filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the Trump administration, “challenging abrupt changes that would cut outgoing support from established homeless housing programs," the governor’s office said in its announcement, calling the federal decision “callous and unlawful.”

“The lawsuit argues that the changes are illegal because they alter funding eligibility without authorization by Congress and are not supported by evidence or reason,” the announcement said. 

In a Nov. 19 letter to the state’s congressional delegation, California State Association of Counties Chief Executive Officer Graham Knaus called the policy change “dramatic” which would displace tens of thousands of individuals from their homes and reverse progress in efforts at every level. 

Counties, as direct recipients of CoC funding, would feel the impact immediately.

“The proposed policy will reverberate and have detrimental effects throughout the populations counties serve, including older adults, families, veterans, people with disabilities, transition-aged youth — as well as households connected to Medi-Cal, CalFresh, CalWORKs, and child welfare systems — and could place 26,000 people in California at risk of losing housing,” Knaus wrote.

The Governor's Office called these cuts “needlessly putting American families at risk.”

Since 2016, the state law has required all housing programs to adopt the “housing first” approach which prioritizes placing people into permanent housing without preconditions such as employment or completion of treatment. 

However, the Trump Administration considered the approach failed, ordering federal agencies including HUD to take actions including “ending support for ‘housing first’ policies that deprioritize accountability.”

The Governor’s Office said California’s Housing First policy and permanent supportive housing programs have “proven successful.” 

“These shifts not only threaten existing programs — they jeopardize the braided system of federal, state, and local investments that keep California’s homelessness response viable,” the Governor’s Office said.

For Lake County, permanent housing remains one of the most important indicators of local progress in addressing homelessness.

From 2020 to 2025, the Lake County Continuum of Care touched 1,378 unhoused individuals and helped 41% or 575 of them get permanently housed, according to District 2 Supervisor and Lake County CoC Chair Bruno Sabatier at an unhoused crisis town hall in September. 

“That is an outstanding percentage… an absolute win for the CoC and its partners,” he said. 

In rapid rehousing, the local CoC worked with 274 individuals, and 58% or 158 of them have found permanent homes, Sabatier said. 

“People don't need to show that they're ready for housing. You are ready for housing just because you exist. You don’t need to graduate to housing,” Redwood Community Services Integrated Health Director Sage Wolf said at the town hall when talking about the “Housing First” approach in her work. “Ultimately housing is the thing that solves homelessness.”

Data from the Public Policy Institute of California shows that from 2023 to 2024, Lake County CoC saw a 31.3% increase in its total homeless population, including a 68% rise in unsheltered homelessness and a 15.3% decline in sheltered homelessness. 

The 2025 point-in-time count recorded 362 unhoused individuals in Lake County. 

In 2023, 12 deaths among Lake County’s unhoused residents were reported, followed by 14 in 2024 and 14 so far in 2025, Sabatier said in an email to Lake County News in September. 

Email staff writer Lingzi Chen at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

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