Asked by Blaine

At the harvest festival in 1621…

the Wampanoag people cooked the Europeans a traditional meal to congratulate them on a successful harvest.

the Europeans thanked the Wampanoag by bringing a feast of European foods to their village.

there was a mixture of both European traditions and Wampanoag foods for people to enjoy.

both the Europeans and Wampanoag people wrote letters of thanks to one another.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The correct choice is: there was a mixture of both European traditions and Wampanoag foods for people to enjoy.

Why: 1621 at Plymouth was a three‑day harvest celebration attended by Pilgrims and Wampanoag (including Massasoit). Contemporary accounts (e.g., Edward Winslow) report that the Wampanoag brought venison and helped with hunting, while the Pilgrims provided fowl, seafood and other provisions — so the event featured foods and practices from both groups. The other choices are inaccurate: the Wampanoag didn’t simply cook a single congratulatory meal for the Europeans, the feast wasn’t merely the Europeans bringing European foods into the Wampanoag village, and there’s no record of exchanged letters of thanks.