从解放日到六月十日:得克萨斯州庆祝活动的起源

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Carl H. Moneyhon
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Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston and issued General Order No. 3, which informed Texans that slavery was at an end. The day was so widely celebrated in the state that the Texas Legislature made it a state holiday in 1979. In his remarks, President Biden pointed to that date as an important day to commemorate the end of slavery while at the same time consider the work that still needed to be done to bring about racial justice and equality in American society. \"[I]t's not enough,\" he said, \"just to commemorate Juneteenth. After all, the emancipation of enslaved Black Americans didn't mark the end of America's work to deliver on the promise of equality. 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Reinforcing the idea that slavery had ended in 1863 was the fact that where Confederate troops had surrendered elsewhere, the Union Army had \"refused to make terms for gradual emancipation,\" apparently assuming it had already taken place.\" This understanding of Texans was confirmed further in early June when Confederate agents Ashbel Smith and Brig. Gen. Thomas Harrison returned from New Orleans, where they had negotiated a surrender...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":42779,"journal":{"name":"SOUTHWESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY","volume":"60 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Emancipation Day to Juneteenth: The Origins of a Texas Celebration\",\"authors\":\"Carl H. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 从解放日到六月十日:德克萨斯州庆祝活动的起源 卡尔-H-钱洪(简历 点击查看大图 查看完整分辨率 1886 年 5 月,印第安纳波利斯的威廉-B-伯福德制作了《解放奴隶宣言》的通俗印刷品。美国国会图书馆提供。 2021 年 6 月 17 日,约瑟夫-拜登(Joseph R. Biden)总统签署了一项法案,将六一国家独立日定为法定公共假日。在此过程中,他承认了德克萨斯州在 6 月 19 日举行的一个由来已久的庆祝活动,这一天是 1865 年联邦少将戈登-格兰杰(Gordon Granger)抵达加尔维斯顿并发布第 3 号通令的日子,该通令通知德克萨斯人奴隶制已经结束。这一天在该州广为传颂,得克萨斯州议会于 1979 年将其定为州假日。拜登总统在讲话中指出,这一天是纪念奴隶制结束的重要日子,同时也是思考在美国社会实现种族公正和平等仍需努力的日子。"他说:"仅仅纪念六一儿童节是不够的。毕竟,被奴役的美国黑人获得解放并不标志着美国实现平等承诺的工作已经结束。为了纪念六一儿童节的真正意义,我们必须继续努力实现这一承诺,因为我们还没有达到这一目标。"1 尽管六一儿童节因此成为全国性节日,但 2022 年进行的盖洛普民意调查显示,只有 17% 的美国人对六一儿童节非常了解,其余 83% 的人知之甚少或一无所知。这些研究探讨了德克萨斯州黑人如何看待和记忆 "六一 "节,哪些事件导致了格兰杰的行动,在哪些方面奴隶制在这一天并未在德克萨斯州真正结束,以及如何通过 "六一 "节的视角来看待该州的历史改变了历史观。这方面的研究大多集中于 19 世纪晚期和 20 世纪的 "六一 "节活动,但较少关注这些活动在最初阶段是如何发展的。从 1866 年首次举办活动到 19 世纪 70 年代和 80 年代现代形式的发展,情况尤其如此。本文试图填补这一空白,询问德克萨斯人是如何确定 6 月 19 日为庆祝日的,谁组织并支持了解放日活动(1890 年代称之为解放日,本文也将如此称呼),以及对解放的记忆和庆祝活动本身在这些年中发生了怎样的变化。在南北战争结束后的几年里,对于解放何时在得克萨斯州合法进行并没有达成一致意见。许多在 1865 年抵达德克萨斯的联邦军队和联邦官员认为奴隶制在 1863 年 1 月 1 日结束,即亚伯拉罕-林肯总统的《解放奴隶宣言》生效之日。该公告宣布,居住在当时仍在反抗国家政府的地区的被奴役者获得自由。这意味着德克萨斯州邦联的大部分被奴役者都获得了自由。在其他一些前邦联州,这一天也成了庆祝的日子。当时,甚至连白人邦联成员都认为,国家政府打算承认这个日子。例如,《加尔维斯顿新闻》(Galveston News)的编辑在 1865 年 5 月(当时德克萨斯州的战争尚未结束)向读者保证,共和党 "决心执行解放奴隶宣言",并认为这种威胁要求德克萨斯人继续战斗。更让人们相信奴隶制已于 1863 年结束的事实是,在邦联军队投降的其他地方,联邦军队 "拒绝提出逐步解放的条件",显然是假定解放已经发生。6 月初,邦联特工阿什贝尔-史密斯(Ashbel Smith)和准将托马斯-哈里森(Thomas Harrison)从新奥尔良返回,进一步证实了德克萨斯人的这种理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emancipation Day to Juneteenth: The Origins of a Texas Celebration
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Emancipation Day to Juneteenth:The Origins of a Texas Celebration
  • Carl H. Moneyhon (bio)

Click for larger view
View full resolution

A popular print of the Emancipation Proclamation produced in May 1886 by William B. Burford of Indianapolis, IN. Courtesy of Library of Congress.

On June 17, 2021, Pres. Joseph R. Biden signed a bill that designated Juneteenth National Independence Day as a legal public holiday. In doing so, he recognized a long-standing Texas celebration on June 19 that remembered the day in 1865 when Union Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston and issued General Order No. 3, which informed Texans that slavery was at an end. The day was so widely celebrated in the state that the Texas Legislature made it a state holiday in 1979. In his remarks, President Biden pointed to that date as an important day to commemorate the end of slavery while at the same time consider the work that still needed to be done to bring about racial justice and equality in American society. "[I]t's not enough," he said, "just to commemorate Juneteenth. After all, the emancipation of enslaved Black Americans didn't mark the end of America's work to deliver on the promise of equality. To honor the true meaning of Juneteenth, we have to continue toward that promise because we've not gotten there yet."1 Even though it thus became a national holiday, a Gallup Poll taken in 2022 showed that only seventeen percent of Americans knew a lot about Juneteenth, while the remaining eighty-three percent knew little or nothing.2

This lack of knowledge exists despite the fact that historians have written extensively about the celebration, especially since the creation of the state [End Page 1] holiday. Studies have examined how Juneteenth was perceived and remembered by Black Texans, what events led to Granger's action, in what way slavery did not actually end in Texas on that day, and how viewing the state's history through the lens of Juneteenth alters historical perspectives. Much of this work focuses on Juneteenth events staged later in the nineteenth and into the twentieth centuries; however, less attention has been paid to how these events developed in their earliest stages. This is true especially from 1866, when the first events were held, up to the development of the modern forms in the 1870s and 1880s. This essay seeks to fill in that gap, asking how Texans settled on June 19 as the day to celebrate, who organized and supported Emancipation Day events (as they were called into the 1890s and will be so referred to in this article), and how the memory of emancipation and the celebrations themselves changed through those years.3

That June 19 would become the day that Black Texans celebrated emancipation was not initially apparent. No agreement existed in the years following the end of the Civil War as to when emancipation legally took place in Texas. Many of the Union troops and federal officials who arrived in 1865 considered slavery to have ended on January 1, 1863, the effective date of Pres. Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. It declared those enslaved people free who lived in areas that remained in rebellion against the national government at that time. That meant most of the enslaved people in Confederate Texas. In some other former Confederate states, this date became the one celebrated. At the time, even White Confederates believed that the national government intended to recognize that date. The editor of the Galveston News, for example, assured his readers in May 1865 (when the war had not ended in Texas), that the Republican Party was "determined to carry out the emancipation proclamation" and concluded that this threat required Texans to keep fighting. Reinforcing the idea that slavery had ended in 1863 was the fact that where Confederate troops had surrendered elsewhere, the Union Army had "refused to make terms for gradual emancipation," apparently assuming it had already taken place." This understanding of Texans was confirmed further in early June when Confederate agents Ashbel Smith and Brig. Gen. Thomas Harrison returned from New Orleans, where they had negotiated a surrender...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
106
期刊介绍: The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest. The first 100 volumes of the Quarterly, more than 57,000 pages, are now available Online with searchable Tables of Contents.
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