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Juneteenth: The complicated history, significance and celebration around the struggle for freedom - University of South Florida

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Juneteenth has become the most well-known celebration for the ending of slavery in the United States and viewed by some as America’s second Independence Day. But the history of this important celebration is complex and often misunderstood.

Juneteenth isn’t a straightforward story of emancipation, nor did it necessarily improve conditions for many African Americans the next day or even the next decade, according to Erin Stewart Mauldin, assistant professor of history at USF’s St. Petersburg campus and an expert on the Civil War and Reconstruction.

“Juneteenth is neither the beginning nor the end of something,” Mauldin said. “The end of the Civil War and the ending of slavery didn’t happen overnight and was a lot more like a jagged edge than a clean cut.”

Dating back to 1865, the holiday commemorates the day when 250,000 slaves in the state of Texas, which became the last bastion for slavery during the final days of the Civil War, were declared free by the U.S. Army.

As soon as the following year, local festivities were organized in African American communities to celebrate and remember the significance of that day, June 19. The celebrations continued year after year.

In the 20th century, as African Americans from Texas and neighboring states spread throughout the country, so too did Juneteenth celebrations. In 1980, Texas became the first to make it a state holiday.

Today, 45 states plus the District of Colombia recognize it as such, while more and more organizations and businesses across the nation host events and educational opportunities dedicated to commemorating the significance of this day.

“There are many people and students who do not know what Juneteenth is,” said Dwayne Isaacs, director of Student Life & Engagement on USF’s St. Petersburg campus. “Any opportunity we have to provide a space to educate on and celebrate this true event is important because it gives one a better understanding and perspective on the people around you, specifically Black people and their history.”

On Thursday, June 17, the University of South Florida’s Office of Multicultural Affairs will hold a celebration titled Juneteenth: Celebration of Liberation. The event brings together students, faculty and staff from across all three USF campuses and will be part history lesson, part conversation on racial issues today and part celebration. Spoken word poetry and student performances will intermix with the conversation.

“We want those speaking to share their thoughts and those attending to think about what Juneteenth means to them, especially in light of current racial issues in our country,” said Isaacs, who helped organize the event.

Emancipation & the fight for racial justice

All slaves in the Confederate states were technically freed as early as January 1, 1863, the date when the Emancipation Proclamation was signed by President Abraham Lincoln and went into effect. The proclamation was only as good as the Union army’s enforcement of it (and didn’t pertain to slaves in the Union border states of Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri), meaning slavery ended in a region when the army occupied the territory.

Even after General Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate Army, surrendered at Appomattox on April 9, 1865, an event generally regarded as the end of the Civil War, battles, skirmishes and slavery continued. The last Confederate holdouts moved further away from the approaching Union army as possible, ending up in Texas.

“When Lee surrendered at Appomattox, it’s not over. Major military campaigns went through June and people continue to fight for years,” Mauldin explained. “Depending on how isolated the enslaved were from the U.S. army or networks of information or places they could escape to, bondage did not end in 1865.”

From there, the story becomes even more complicated. Now free, the formerly enslaved had no wealth, no property and few places to turn. The best solution for many was staying where they were, working for former slave owners and fighting to ensure they would now get paid in a new arrangement of employer and hired labor.

“Plantation owners didn’t want to pay their former slaves at all and the former Confederate states were more or less broke after the war, so they didn’t have money to even pay,” Mauldin said. “Though slavery ends, the conditions for many change very little initially.”

Eventually contracts would become standardized among employers and labor and an economic system of sharecropping developed. Laborers would work a plot of land for a share of the crop or profits at the end of the year. Some would begin to amass goods and property, enough to make their own decisions on what to plant, what livestock to buy and even hire additional laborers to farm the land.

But many in this new economic system would amass debt, as the only way to receive property and items to farm was to become indebted to landowners. The struggle for freedom morphed into a struggle for economic independence.

“Freedom was not a straight line from the Emancipation Proclamation to Juneteenth to the Civil Rights movement,” Mauldin said. “Individuals had to fight for every piece of freedom they experienced and the struggle for racial justice that started long before the war did not end with emancipation.”

The celebration of Juneteenth today is important because it helps initiate difficult conversations and raises awareness about the country’s complicated and tragic history of slavery and racial injustice, Mauldin said.

“It is immensely important to remember the difficulties of fighting and securing even the smallest measures of freedom,” she said. “Juneteenth has become a symbol for emancipation and provides a highly visible celebration that does get at these difficult conversations of America’s racial history.”

General Order No. 3 from Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger, freeing the slaves of Texas on June 19, 1865 (known today as Juneteenth)

“The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere."

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