The celebration of Juneteenth is not only a show-
case event
of the African American community's positive contributions to the American way of life, but it also makes a statement for
all Americans that the United States is truly the "Land of the Free." Juneteenth is an expression and extension of American
freedom and, like the Fourth of July, a time for all Americans to celebrate our independence, human rights, civil rights and
freedom.
Juneteenth began in the great state of Texas when Major General
Gordon Granger of the Union Army led his troops into the city of Galveston. There, on June 19, 1865, he officially proclaimed
freedom for slaves in that state. Granger's ride through Galveston culminated a two-and-a-half year trek through America's
deep south. But many states, parishes and counties had been excluded from learning of President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation
Proclamation, leaving millions of African American slaves without their freedom. Thus it was that on this date the African
American slaves of Texas and other parts of the South celebrated the final execution of the Emancipation Proclamation, giving
them their freedom forever.
The former slaves of Galveston were quick to establish what
was to become a tradition for African American communities across the United States. One the evening of June 19, 1865, thousands
flooded the streets of Galveston, rejoicing in their newly-announced freedom The sweet smell of barbecue smoke filled the
air. Dancing feet pounded the dirt roads and harmonic voices sung spirituals. This was the day, Juneteenth, that would forever
commemorate African American Freedom.