Calhoun Times

Ga. to add Juneteenth to list of official state holidays

- By Dave Williams

State workers will get a day off to observe Juneteenth for the first time next year, subject to the approval of the General Assembly.

A memo Gov. Brian Kemp sent to state agency heads last week lists Juneteenth — marking the freedom of enslaved Americans at the end of the Civil War — as one of 13 holidays when state offices will be closed.

The holiday will be observed on June 20 in 2022 because June 19 — the actual Juneteenth holiday — falls on a Sunday.

The additional holiday requires legislativ­e approval because current Georgia law only lists 12 state holidays. Legislatio­n pre-filed in the state House of Representa­tives last week by Rep. Lauren McDonald, R-Cumming, one of Kemp’s floor leaders in the House, would authorize a 13th state holiday.

McDonald’s bill also requires Georgia to observe all federal holidays. President Joe Biden signed legislatio­n last June officially designatin­g Juneteenth as a federal holiday.

Juneteenth, a contractio­n of “June” and “nineteen,” marks the date in 1865 when

Union Army Gen. Gordon Granger issued General Order No. 3 in Galveston, Texas, proclaimin­g the end of slavery in the Lone Star State.

President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipati­on Proclamati­on, which took effect Jan. 1, 1863, only applied to the 11 Confederat­e states, realistica­lly areas of those states under Union control. It took the Union winning the war to enforce emancipati­on throughout the South.

 ?? Steven eckhoff, File ?? Candles are lit during a Juneteenth celebratio­n in Rome on June 21.
Steven eckhoff, File Candles are lit during a Juneteenth celebratio­n in Rome on June 21.

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