Since the murder of George Floyd last summer, Juneteenth has taken on a more celebratory, but urgent tone in African American communities. Gatherings with friends and family marking when the last enslaved Black people found out they were free, compete with citywide events.
Even the U.S. government is joining the party. President Joe Biden signed a bill this week making Juneteenth a national holiday.
Joseph McGill is the founder of the Slave Dwelling Project, and the History and Culture Coordinator at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens in Charleston, South Carolina. For the first time, McGill will be in Galveston, Texas, on Juneteenth 鈥 June 19 鈥 where the celebration began.
McGill is also a Civil War reenactor, representing the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, an all-African American Civil War unit. Black Union troops were instrumental in enforcing the order delivered in Texas demanding 鈥渁bsolute equality鈥 among enslaved people and slave owners.
鈥淚鈥檒l be in my Civil War uniform reenacting what one of the soldiers did,鈥 said McGill. 鈥淚 will get a document handed to me. I will read that document. I will pin that document to the wall.鈥
Another historical reenactment performed leading up to Juneteenth was the dramatization called 鈥淪eeking Justice.鈥 A group of Warren County, North Carolina, residents brought to life a 1921 court hearing where 16 Black men were arrested for rioting and assault.
The gunfight, known as the 鈥淣orlina Riot,鈥 started after two Black men tried to return rotten apples they purchased from a white shop keeper. Plummer Bullock and Alfred Williams were later lynched and murdered. No white men were charged.
鈥淭his ain鈥檛 justice! No complete justice!鈥 said actor Tywayne Ball, playing the part of Jerome Hunter. Hunter, a Black man, was shot and returned fire during the riot and was later convicted and sentenced to several years of hard labor.
鈥淭hose cowards came and busted Plummer and Alfred out of jail and murdered them!鈥 said Hunter, during the play. 鈥淎nd left them on the side of the road like dead, rotten pigs.鈥
Thomas Park wrote and directed 鈥淪eeking Justice,鈥 with the help of the UNC Chapel Hill Descendants Project. Park said knowing the plight of many Blacks once slavery legally ended was emotional.
鈥淭here鈥檚 another emotion that developed in me, probably something I was actually trying to suppress,鈥 said Park. 鈥淵ou still want to say, these things didn鈥檛 happen.鈥
Fifty miles south of Warren County, in Wake County, Kevin Jones dropped a little Black history knowledge at Wooten鈥檚 Barbershop in Wendell.
鈥淚 am so happy Juneteenth got its recognition though, for so long it was Fourth of July,鈥 said Jones, comparing America鈥檚 Independence Day with the day enslaved people were freed. 鈥淭hose are the things you want to tell your children.鈥
Jones will spend Juneteenth like he has for the past several years, with hundreds of Black men, at the North Carolina Fatherhood Conference. It鈥檚 virtual this year. Jones said, in these times, he works to be very honest and open with his son and stepson.
鈥淚 have to be direct, as you get older, things are going to change. Things are not going to be fair,鈥 said Jones. 鈥淭rying to be a hero, our Black boys are not making it home. You have purpose.鈥