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Looking Back While Moving Forward

Juneteenth Videos

Guide

This Guide was created for the attendees of our virtual presentation entitled - Looking Back While Moving Forward. It contains resources to help researchers delve deeper into this topic and understand the importance of this celebration. 

Juneteenth (short for June Nineteenth) or Emancipation Day, June 19th, is a holiday celebrating the end of slavery in the United States. It began in Texas when news of Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation (effective January 1, 1863) finally reached Galveston on June 19, 1865. Union Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger read a general order to the assembled people stating that every slave is emancipated, and Texas thus became the last state to learn of the Confederate surrender and the emancipation of the slaves. The announcement sparked immediate celebration in the local black community, and the following year the date was again commemorated.

From then on June 19th that was treated much like an African-American Fourth of July, and the holiday spread throughout Texas and into nearby states. Typical 19th-century Juneteenth activities included prayer, speeches, the reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, recitation of slave stories, rodeos, dances, games, and plenty of food. The holiday spread when African-Americans from the South migrated to urban areas outside the region. Modern observances tend to emphasize food, drink, and recreation. A movement to make Juneteenth a national holiday has the official support of about half the states; it is a state holiday in 14 states.

 

Juneteenth. (2018). In P. Lagasse, & Columbia University, The Columbia encyclopedia (8th ed.). Columbia University Press. Credo Reference: http://ezproxy.nccu.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/columency/juneteenth/0?institutionId=4295

Resources for Further Research

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