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Someone got to the bottom of this "holiday" today. Supposedly it's just an extremely minor celebration by an extremely small pocket of exclusively black-Texans.
Despite this, all my dumbest friends have somehow remembered all the amazing Juneteenth parties they've been to, over the years.
It's worse than that. There were black slaves in Alabama that didn't find out they were free until the 60's. Masters said the others had bought thier freedom. True story. Sry, no link but it's out there. I read about when I lived in TN decades ago.
That's if you count from the time of Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation to the end of the Civil War. Everybody seems to forget that the Emancipation Proc. only freed the slaves in the "states under rebellion". Slavery in all the US didn't end until the 13th Amendment was passed in August 1866.
Well if the south had won, they were still enslaved.
Then, following the war somehow the news that the north had won didn’t make it to the slaves in Texas for about six months until a ship landed at Galveston to lay down the law. That happened on the nineteenth of June.
I admit it is hard to understand how people were kept in the dark that long, but presumably normal communications and news reports were not getting in for some time after the war ended.
[–]bfriend130 points
3 points
3 points
(+3|-0)
ago
A lot of news used to come by ship. Not six months, but the Battle of New Orleans occurred 18 days after the treaty ending the war was signed.
The best part of the story is the British commander Edward Pakenham, who was killed in the battle and was supposedly packed in a rum barrel for the voyage back to England for burial. Sailors weren't picky and drank half the barrel before the ship arrived in England. So only his bottom half was preserved.
Black holidays are never about celebrating things blacks have accomplished. It's always about them whining about slavery and oppression. Historically, they're far from the most oppressed group of people in the world.
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[–] DeadBeatNigger 0 points 6 points 6 points (+6|-0) ago
Someone got to the bottom of this "holiday" today. Supposedly it's just an extremely minor celebration by an extremely small pocket of exclusively black-Texans.
Despite this, all my dumbest friends have somehow remembered all the amazing Juneteenth parties they've been to, over the years.
[–] ArielQflip 1 point 6 points 7 points (+7|-1) ago
It's worse than that. There were black slaves in Alabama that didn't find out they were free until the 60's. Masters said the others had bought thier freedom. True story. Sry, no link but it's out there. I read about when I lived in TN decades ago.
[–] Catfishbelly 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
Like the 1960s? Or 1860
[–] ArielQflip ago
19
[–] ScionOfZion 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago
Joomteemf
[–] gimpyoldman 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
That's if you count from the time of Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation to the end of the Civil War. Everybody seems to forget that the Emancipation Proc. only freed the slaves in the "states under rebellion". Slavery in all the US didn't end until the 13th Amendment was passed in August 1866.
[–] my_goyim 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
Judenteenth. Haa ha ha ha
[–] Nicoladepierola 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago (edited ago)
Communication took time and those who were literate had a vested interest in not telling them.
[–] Hammernale 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
Well if the south had won, they were still enslaved.
Then, following the war somehow the news that the north had won didn’t make it to the slaves in Texas for about six months until a ship landed at Galveston to lay down the law. That happened on the nineteenth of June.
I admit it is hard to understand how people were kept in the dark that long, but presumably normal communications and news reports were not getting in for some time after the war ended.
[–] bfriend13 0 points 3 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago
A lot of news used to come by ship. Not six months, but the Battle of New Orleans occurred 18 days after the treaty ending the war was signed.
The best part of the story is the British commander Edward Pakenham, who was killed in the battle and was supposedly packed in a rum barrel for the voyage back to England for burial. Sailors weren't picky and drank half the barrel before the ship arrived in England. So only his bottom half was preserved.
[–] Catfishbelly 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
During the war train tracks telegraphs and other means of communication were destroyed.
[–] aaronC 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Black holidays are never about celebrating things blacks have accomplished. It's always about them whining about slavery and oppression. Historically, they're far from the most oppressed group of people in the world.