Black News and Black Views with a Whole Lotta Attitude
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Black News and Black Views with a Whole Lotta Attitude

Everything You Want to Know About The History of Juneteenth

The Root explains how this Texan-based celebration came to be our 12th federal holiday.

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Boston, MA - June 19: A woman poses for a photo wearing a hat that reads “J19" at the 13th annual Juneteenth Emancipation Flag Raising and Parade hosted by the Boston Juneteenth Committee and the Museum of the National Center of Afro American Artists (NCAAA)
Boston, MA - June 19: A woman poses for a photo wearing a hat that reads “J19" at the 13th annual Juneteenth Emancipation Flag Raising and Parade hosted by the Boston Juneteenth Committee and the Museum of the National Center of Afro American Artists (NCAAA)
Photo: Vincent Alban/The Boston Globe (Getty Images)

Although Juneteenth has only been a federal holiday for a few years, the annual celebration held on June 19th has captured the hearts of Black Americans for decades. But don’t worry if you’re too embarrassed to ask what we’re actually celebrating (been there). The Root has you covered with our deep dive into all things Juneteenth!

Although it’s a common misconception that Juneteenth is the day slavery officially ended in the United States, that’s not quite right. On June 19th, 1865, Major General Gordon Granger proclaimed that all enslaved people in Texas were free in accordance with a “proclamation from the Executive of the United States.” Naturally, the proclamation he’s referring to is the Emancipation Proclamation issued by President Lincoln, freeing all enslaved people within the Confederacy.

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Only folks who know their history might be a tad confused by the date. “Granger wasn’t just a few months late,” writes historian and The Root co-founder Henry Louis Gates Jr. “The Emancipation Proclamation itself, ending slavery in the Confederacy (at least on paper), had taken effect two-and-a-half years before, and in the interim.”

Alright, so if Lincoln had already freed the slaves, and the civil war had been over for months, why did it take until June of 1865 for enslaved people in Texas to be freed? “It would be easy to think so in our world of immediate communication, but as Granger and the 1,800 bluecoats under him soon found out, news traveled slowly in Texas,” writes Gates. It wasn’t until June that the Trans-Mississippi army, which held Texas, surrendered.

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And even after the army surrendered, enslaved people in Texas weren’t free to just leave. Enslavers often waited to tell people of Major General Gordon’s proclamation, and even in cases where they were aware, many were punished for leaving. It would be months before the Freedmen’s Bureau arrived in Texas to help free the remaining enslaved people. And it would be six months from the initial proclamation before the 13th Amendment was ratified, declaring slavery unconstitutional (except as a punishment for a crime).

Gates pulls from Hayes Turner’s writings to explain why the celebration meant so much to the freed people of Texas:

“‘The way it was explained to me,’ ” one heir to the tradition is quoted in Hayes Turner’s essay, ” ‘the 19th of June wasn’t the exact day the Negro was freed. But that’s the day they told them that they was free … And my daddy told me that they whooped and hollered and bored holes in trees with augers and stopped it up with [gun] powder and light and that would be their blast for the celebration.’ ”

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As Black Texans migrated throughout the country, the tradition of celebrating Juneteenth as a day of freedom spread with them. The first push to make Juneteenth a federal holiday began in the mid-90s. In 1997, Senator Trent Lott introduced a joint resolution commemorating “Juneteenth Independence Day.” The calls to make Juneteenth a federal holiday grew in the wake of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor’s killing at the hands of police in 2020. And in 2021, President Joe Biden signed a law making Juneteenth a federal holiday. With the signing of the bill, Juneteenth became the 12th federal holiday recognized by the federal government!