More Holiday Travel:
Celebrate With a Holiday Getaway
Slide Show: 50 Top Shops
Endless Furniture Options in High Point
Slide Show: City of Lights
Plan a Holiday Getaway Now
Start Now For the Holidays
Sparkle in a Small Virginia Town
This Road Rules!
A Quest for the Country's Best Desserts
The Art of Holiday Shopping
A Capital Holiday
Cozy Mountain Getaways
Gatlinburg Getaway
Ultimate Guide to Chocolate
Biltmore by Candlelight
Savannah Rings in the Season
Take This Cake
Colonial Thanksgiving
Get a Head Start on the Holidays
A Virginia Wonderland
Slide Show: Taste the Flavors of Charleston
Cajun Christmas in Louisiana
Where Shopping and Entertainment Meet
 
Holiday Travel Package:
Editor's Travel Tips: Highway Travel
Editor's Travel Tips: Negotiate a Savvy Travel Bargain
Editor's Travel Tips: De-Stressing
Editor's Travel Tips: Renting a Car
 



Slide Show: Holidays Across the South


 
Colonial Thanksgiving
Friendly folks and delicious food welcome you to Williamsburg.
By Mark G. Stith / Photography Art Meripol / Styling Rose Nguyen

Bakers carry baskets of fresh bread on Duke of Gloucester Street in Colonial Williamsburg.

A NOTE TO OUR READERS:
"Colonial Thanksgiving" is from the November 2003 issue of Southern Living. Because prices, dates, and other specifics are subject to change, please check all information to make sure it's still current before making your travel plans.

Sunrise and fresh-baked bread warm up a cool, crisp day at Colonial Williamsburg. The alluring mix tempts the morning's first visitors to follow the costumed bakers to the Raleigh Tavern on Duke of Gloucester Street (shortened to "Dog" Street by locals). There you'll find baskets filled with goodness. You couldn't ask for a more appetizing start to celebrating Thanksgiving's bounty at Colonial Williamsburg.

Sobering current events at home and abroad renew and strengthen our ties with family, faith, fellowship, and national pride. Restore and rejuvenate those bonds by sitting down to lunch or dinner at one of the four dining taverns in the Historic Area.

All of them offer superb holiday fare, costumed servers, roving minstrels, authentic furnishings, and a pleasant atmosphere. Our favorite meal has to be the sumptuous offering for Thanksgiving dinner at King's Arms Tavern. Start with cream of Virginia peanut soup, so rich, flavorful, and filling that they could serve it as the main course. But then there would be no room for the roasted young turkey served with giblet gravy, cornbread dressing, Carolina candied yams, and cranberry chutney.

Dessert can't be any better than their warm mincemeat pie. But you might be talked into tasting their seven-layer chocolate cake. Last year, the restaurant added wines from French vineyards visited by Thomas Jefferson. Starting at $45 for the 1997 Villeneuve Châteauneuf-du-Pape, they're not inexpensive, but consider the company. This special Thanksgiving feast is rather pricey also ( $42.50adults, $19.95 ages 11 and under), but you'll get a meal and a memory that you'll savor.




above, right: A distinguished, convincing Thomas Jefferson leads visitors to the place where he will begin a lecture on current colonial events.
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