Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The ‘other half of the Fourth of July’

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President Joe Biden last year signed legislatio­n making Juneteenth America’s 11th federal holiday. The celebratio­n, also known as Emancipati­on Day and Freedom Day, marks the day, June 19, when slavery was finally abolished in Texas in 1865.

Most Americans remember that President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on in January 1863, ending the stain of slavery in the United States. But there’s more to the story.

While the proclamati­on decreed that “all persons held as slaves” shall be “forever free,” it was ignored in the Southern states and did not apply to slave states that fought with the Union, including Texas. More than two months after Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendere­d at Appomattox, effectivel­y ending the bloodiest conflict in American history, the practice of slavery continued in the Lone Star State.

But on June 19, 1865, Union Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger entered Galveston,

Texas, and shared some welcome news. “In accordance with a proclamati­on from the executive of the United States, all slaves are free,” Gen. Granger said. The next year, former slaves celebrated their freedom on June 19 — Juneteenth.

Recognitio­n of these events is long overdue and can help Americans better grasp the most troubling aspect of this nation’s history.

In addition, this should be a celebratio­n for all Americans, helping to further understand­ing of the power of this country’s founding ideals when they are applied to all people and the brilliance of the Founders in crafting a Constituti­on that creates a framework for justice and freedom.

“Juneteenth asks Americans to recognize that our nation’s principles are neither grossly hypocritic­al nor naively aspiration­al,” Opal Lee and DeForest “Buster” Soaries wrote last week for The Washington Post. “We have inherited lofty yet practical ideals, and it falls to us to implement them as best we can.”

Ms. Lee and Mr. Soaries see Juneteenth as “the other half of the Fourth of July” and “a day that celebrates America’s incredible capacity to self-correct by applying the timeless principles at our country’s core. … What could be more American than rememberin­g the forward march of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?”

Juneteenth is a reminder of how the Founders ensured that this nation has the constituti­onal framework to correct its mistakes. It is a reminder that progress is possible and, indeed, has been achieved.

Slavery was a grievous moral evil that inflicted unspeakabl­e horrors. Ending that hideous institutio­n brought freedom to thousands and bolstered the ideals upon which this nation was created. That’s worth commemorat­ing, even if African Americans’ centurylon­g struggle for civil rights showed that much work remained — and remains.

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? People check out vendors during a 2020 Juneteenth event held by Save Our Sons at Lorenzi Park.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-Journal People check out vendors during a 2020 Juneteenth event held by Save Our Sons at Lorenzi Park.

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