Texarkana Gazette

Six quick facts about Juneteenth

- By Stephanie Toone

ATLANTA — June 19 marks a pivotal point in American history. On June 19, 1865, the last slaves in Texas and more broadly the Confederat­e South were freed.

Nationally and in cities like Atlanta, Georgia, the day has been celebrated with parades, plays and other festivitie­s that honor the African-American culture that developed during and after slavery. With COVID-19 on the horizon, some of those events will not take place due to social distancing. Efforts like HellaJunet­eenth, a California advocacy campaign, invite people to honor the holiday in a virtual space and are pushing to recognize the day as a national holiday.

Here are 6 answers to some common questions posed about Juneteenth:

■ Didn’t the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on end slavery years earlier?

Yes and No. According to archives. gov, Abraham Lincoln issued the preliminar­y Emancipati­on Proclamati­on on Sept. 22, 1862, declaring “on the first day of January … all p’ersons held as slaves within any State, or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then, thenceforw­ard, and forever free.”

The proclamati­on applied only to states that had seceded from the United States, leaving slavery to remain unchalleng­ed in the border states, according to archives.gov. It would take nearly two-and-half years for Lincoln’s proclamati­on to be relayed to Texas.

■ How did Juneteenth begin?

On June 19, 1865, Major Gen. Gordon Granger came to Galveston, Texas, to inform a reluctant community that President Abraham Lincoln two years earlier had freed the slaves and to press locals to comply with his directive. On this day, Granger announced “General Order No. 3.”

Prior to Granger’s declaratio­n, there were an estimated 250,000 slaves residing in Texas, according to historian Henry Louis Gates Jr.

■ What caused the delay in Texans receiving this news?

Some have noted that Texas’ geographic isolation may have played a role in the delay. According to Juneteenth. com, some accounts place the delay on a messenger who was murdered on his way to Texas with the news, while others say the news was deliberate­ly withheld.

Even with the order, slavery did not end in Texas overnight, according to Gates. Many slave owners traveled to Texas with their slaves to escape regulation­s enforced by the Union Army in other states for some time.

■ Why is it called Juneteenth? Juneteenth is a combinatio­n of “June” and “nineteenth,” in honor of the day that Granger announced the abolition of slavery in Texas. The day is also called Freedom Day.

■ Is it a federal holiday? Juneteenth is not a federal holiday, but many states and the District of Columbia have passed legislatio­n recognizin­g the day as a holiday. On Jan. 1, 1980, Texas was the first state to recognize Juneteenth as a state holiday. Since then, 45 other states and the District of Columbia have also commemorat­ed or recognized the day.

■ How will people honor Juneteenth? Several companies have announced in light of the death of George Floyd that this year they are designatin­g Juneteenth as an official company holiday.

In the past, cities held parades, festivals and forums in celebratio­n of the holiday. With the lingering coronaviru­s pandemic, many of those gatherings have been canceled. Still, many have taken to social media to encourage those who honor the holiday to find their own ways to celebrate.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ A parade passes by a banner depicting Martin Juneteenth Day Festival in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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Tribune News Service ■ A parade passes by a banner depicting Martin Juneteenth Day Festival in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Luther King Jr. during the 2019

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