Note—To learn more about Juneteenth join Gloria Van Hof for her Zoom
presentation Monday, June 20 from 7 to 8:30 pm Monday, June 20, 2022. The presentation is free to the public but
voluntary contributions to Compassion for Campers, the program the supplies
survival needs to the McHenry County unhoused population, are encouraged. To
Register visit https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwud--sqz0iHN1Hm6JD3axuBYswtc-GIZvi
Abraham Lincoln issued
the Emancipation Proclamation on
September 22, 1862. Word spread through
the slave grapevine quickly in much
of the Confederacy and, as Lincoln
had hoped, many slaves abandoned their plantations and sought the safety of Union forces wherever they could.
Not only did this cripple the Rebel economy, but the refugees formed a pool of laborers, teamsters, and—eventually—troops in support of the war effort.
But things were different in Texas at the far western edge of the
Confederacy. Word was slow getting
there. After the fall of Vicksburg in 1863 Confederate territory
west of the Mississippi was pretty
well cut off from the eastern
states. Although word might have leaked
through in some places, around Galveston,
the main port for cotton export from East Texas, slave owners were pretty successful in
keeping their property from learning
that they were free.
Far from the main theater of the war, the last battles
were fought in Texas along the Rio
Grande on May 13 and Major General Kirby Smith, commander
of the Trans-Mississippi District
became the last major Rebel commander
to formally surrender on June 2.
On June 18 Major
General Gordon Granger landed on Galveston
Island to take possession of Texas for the
Union. The next day, June 19, the
General was said to have stepped onto the balcony of the Ashton Villa and addressed a large
crowd of Blacks. He read them his General
Order #3:
The people of Texas are informed
that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United
States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal
rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the
connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and
hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes
and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect
at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there
or elsewhere.
The announcement set off joyous celebrations and the
word spread across Texas. The next year,
former slaves marked the occasions
with more celebrations, which soon became a yearly event. The events were like those that occurred
across the South on local anniversaries of the Jubilee Days of Emancipation.
The first Junteenth celebration one year after the news arrived in Texas. Note the many celebrants in Union Army forage caps and fragments of uniforms. In addition to those who had served in the ranks during the war, many other collected the garments while serving as teamsters or laborers for the Army. Others acquired the gear as surplus after the war.
The Texas
observances quickly became major annual events in Black communities. By 1870 the day became known as Juneteenth
and various traditions started to be
associated with it. Outdoor gatherings of extended
families, churches, or communities grew to be all day festivals. The day typically began with a reading of
Gordon’s and the text of the Emancipation Proclamation followed by recitations of family stories, singing
songs like Swing Low,
Sweet Chariot, dancing, the
recitation of poetry, and prayer.
The central event of the day was usually a community-wide barbeque and potluck.
Late 19th Century ladies in full finery drive a carriage decorated for a Juneteenth parade.
Because slave codes often forbade those in bondage
from wearing finery of any kind, by
the late 19th Century people turned
out in their finest clothes. There were games and contests,
particularly baseball, races of all sorts, and—particularly in
West Texas—rodeos.
In many
towns local blacks pooled their funds to buy land for
the annual gatherings. These Juneteenth Grounds have become city parks in places like Houston and Austin.
Needless to
say, large, exuberant gatherings of Black people frightened and alarmed
many whites. There were attempts to discouraged
participation, but the celebrations continued.
The Depression took a toll
on observances as families were dispersed, and many rural Blacks sought work
in cities where employers did not
take kindly to taking days off of work. Younger folks also began to look on the gatherings
a simply old fashioned.
The Civil Rights movement reignited
interest in the ‘50’s and ‘60’s. After Martin Luther King’s assassination the Reverend Ralph Abernathy promoted
celebrations of Juneteenth during the Poor
People’s Campaign in Washington. Observances began to spread beyond
Texas.
In 1997, the founder of the National Juneteenth Celebration Foundation (NJCF), Ben Haith, created the Juneteenth flag. Raising of the flag ceremonies are now held in Galveston as well other cities across the country. It is raised after the U.S. flag and the national anthem and before the anthem Lift Every Voice and Sing. Here Buffalo Soldier reenactors hoist the colors.
By 2000 a movement arose to make Juneteenth a holiday of some sort in all states and
recognition by the Federal
Government. It is an official state Holiday in Texas and 36
states have granted some sort of recognition.
The celebration even gathered momentum in Africa and other places around the world.
This year
Juneteenth Weekend is also being noted and marked by The Poor Peoples’
Campaign’s Moral March on Washington and to the Polls and Low Wage
Worker’s Assembly today, Saturday June 18 in the nation’s capital.
President Joe Biden signs the law making Juneteenth National Independence Day a national holiday surrounded by long-time activist and advocate of a holiday Opal Lee in white, Vice President Kamala Harris and members of the Congressional Black Caucus.
The day was
first recognized as a Federal Holiday in June 2021, when President Joe Biden
signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law. This year the holiday will be celebrated on
Monday, June 20. Federal employees will
be able to take the day off with pay as some state and municipal workers already
can. There won’t be mail delivery
and Federally charted banks will be closed. Few in the private sector will get the
holiday, however. A lot of Black folks
will take the day any way.
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