Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Juneteenth

I meant to get this up earlier, but I've been running behind all week trying to organize a bunch of events. We have a Litha celebration on Friday. Anyhow, here's a bit of history about Juneteenth:

There is a common misconception among Americans that Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves with a stroke of his pen. Yet the Emancipation Proclamation, which went into effect on Jan. 1, 1863, did no such thing — or, at least, it didn't do a very good job of it. Two and a half years later, on June 19, 1865, Union soldiers sailed into Galveston, Texas, announced the end of the Civil War, and read aloud a general order freeing the quarter-million slaves residing in the state. It's likely that none of them had any idea that they had actually been freed more than two years before. It was truly a day of mass emancipation. It has become known as Juneteenth.

Tags: holiday
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  • 3 comments
The Emancipation Proclamation only covered areas in rebellion. Areas that followed Richmond rather than Washington. In other words, as one Congressman at the time put it "We show our sympathy for slavery by banning it where we have no power, and keeping it where we do" (or something to that effect)

It was a rather peculiar bit of politics there.