On June 19, 1865, Gordon Granger, a major general in the Union Army, marched into Galveston, Texas, announced that the Civil War was over and issued General Order No. 3: “The people of Texas are informed that in accordance with a Proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.” Reactions ranged from shocked amazement to outbreaks of spontaneous celebration.  

The day would come to be recognized as “Juneteenth” and would finally be established as a national holiday in 2021. 

As the nation prepares for the 160th commemoratation of Juneteenth on June 19, read about holiday-related happenings on campus and revisit some past Newsroom stories that explain Juneteenth’s inception, its evolution and what it means for our country.


June 18 screening: A Juneteenth Day Celebration

At 2 p.m. on Wednesday, June 18, the UCLA Department of African American Studies will host a free screening of last year’s large-scale “Prelude to Juneteenth Day Celebration: A Multimedia Event, which took place in Royce Hall.

Cheryl Keyes in purple jacket

Tina Hordzwick / UCLA

Professor Cheryl Keyes, who helped organize and performed at the Juneteenth celebration in Royce Hall in 2024.

Honoring the history of emancipation, the 2024 event reflected on the journey toward freedom and equality through the universal language of art with music, dance, spoken word and more.

Highlights included the world premiere of two works — “Symphony No. 4,” which is also known as the “Juneteenth Symphony,” by Earl Louis Stewart and “Sundiata Keita Overture” by Cheryl Keyes, chair of the African American studies department and a professor of ethnomusicology and global jazz studies at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music — as well as performances by well-known artists such as violinist Karen Briggs and alumnus dancer Bernard Brown. The night also featured vocal soloists, choral and instrumental performances, West African dance, spoken word, and an orchestra with guest conductor Antoine T. Clark.

“I want to celebrate Black life with a lineup of artists and educators whose work will titillate the soul and reflect the incredible interdisciplinary scholarship of our department,” Keyes, who helped organize the event, said at the time. “We took the time and put the passion into making this program something that celebrates inclusive excellence, community engagement and the rich history of the Black experience.”

Read more about the event


Why schools haven’t taught about Juneteenth, and why they should

Far too few Americans know the history of Juneteenth. And that ignorance is connected to the very real erasure that results from the institutional racism woven into the history of the United States.

UCLA

Eddie Cole

“Let us be clear,” Eddie Cole, an associate professor of higher education and organizational change at the UCLA School of Education & Information Studies said in 2021. “Juneteenth has been taught in some American classrooms and there have long been individual teachers who offer a complex, carefully considered nuanced history of Juneteenth and slavery. But they often do so without relying on school textbooks.

“They may explore historical texts from a century ago, or other primary sources. Those teachers provide their students with a more holistic truth and a glimpse at Black liberation and triumph. 

“That said, Juneteenth is not taught in most American classrooms because it is not a feel-good story,” Cole said. “It is an exemplifier of the truth. It is a stunning example of how racism and capitalism have stained the idea of an American democracy. It does not fit the mainstream narrative that centers the nation’s independence. Instead, it highlights the misdeeds, or at least the negligence, of many so-called national heroes. That alone is why it is not taught in many schools.”

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Commemorating Juneteenth is powerful, but there’s more work to be done 

Former UCLA sociology professor Karida Brown, who now teaches at Emory University, didn’t grow up celebrating Juneteenth.

UCLA

Karinda Brown and the cover of her book “Gone Home: Race and Roots Through Appalachia”

She learned about Juneteenth as a Black holiday while she was a graduate student at Brown University and as she worked on her book, “Gone Home: Race and Roots Through Appalachia,” which was published in 2019. During those five years, she interviewed 153 current and former residents of Harlan County, Kentucky, a coal-mining region that boomed from the 1920s through 1960s and included a large population of Black residents.

Brown’s roots reach back to Harlan County, where her parents and grandparents once lived. When she asked them about what she had learned about Juneteenth and how it has historically been celebrated in Black communities, the word “Juneteenth” didn’t connect — but the descriptions of the celebrations, and why they were held, did.

“They said, ‘Oh, you mean the eighth of August,” Brown said. “In these coal mining towns in Kentucky, that was Black Independence Day. My parents very much carry the memory of the meaning of the holiday through their experiences in their childhood, but it wasn’t something they passed down.”

As is often the case in history, progress isn’t linear. In Kentucky and other Southern states, Black communities began celebrating the eighth of August in sometime in the 1860s, commemorating the date that Andrew Johnson, then military-governor of Tennessee freed his personal slaves. Enslaved Black Americans in Texas learned of emancipation on June 19, 1865 — the first Juneteenth — more than six months after the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, took effect.

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How embracing Juneteenth’s meaning could help the U.S. face its racial justice challenges

In a 2020 interview, Brenda Stevenson, an internationally renowned scholar of race, slavery, gender, family and racial conflict, shared thoughts on Juneteeth, its evolution and current iterations, and why acknowledging the date is an important part of the dialogue and push for change when it comes to racial and social justice in the U.S.

Courtesy of Brenda Stevenson

Brenda Stevenson

Stevenson is UCLA’s Nickoll Family Professor of History. 

Much of your work as a historian is centered around finding and telling the stories of individuals, especially women, who were enslaved in this country. Can we think of Juneteeth an opportunity to remember those who never got to experience freedom?  

Definitely. Juneteenth speaks powerfully to the reality that we, as a nation, have to continue to evolve democratically, humanely and morally. It is not just about Black inequality, but the inequality and marginality that many people and groups who do not fit into a particular racial, cultural, class, gender, sexuality, and citizenship box experience in our nation.

How could Juneteeth reflections help highlight those who are caught in the current struggle by way of our system of policing and incarceration?  

The criminal justice system in our country was founded on inequalities linked to a racial hierarchy. It is one of the fundamental national institutions that must be comprehensively changed to address this deep, foundational flaw. Still, it is only one of our essential systems linked to the inequalities alive and well in our society. 

It is a good place to start, but change cannot end there.

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