Today is the 160th anniversary of Juneteenth, the day that Federal Troops landed in Galveston to officially reestablish Federal control over the rebellious state of Texas, lately a member of the rebel Confederate States. On June 18th 1865 a force of Federal soldiers, four regiments of battle hardened U.S.C.T. ( U.S. Colored Troops) landed In Galveston and captured the city. The next day, General Gordon Granger the Commanding Officer of the new Military District of Texas, issued General Order #3, ending slavery in Texas, the final act in fulfilling the Emancipation Proclamation.
Unfortunately, the MAGA Congress and the Trump Regime are continuously trying to eliminate any mention of significant events and people in American history related to African Americans. Instead, they diminish the historical importance by claiming that recognizing these people and events is being hostile to American history and claiming that they are part of an insidious plot by liberals, or “socialists and Marxists” as they have labeled us, called Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion (DEI) which is designed to destroy the accomplishments of White people. The Secretary of Defense, Drunken Pete Hegseth, instructed the Defense Department to mark the occasion silently in order not to promote DEI. But, whether it is Drunken Pete, or the other parts of the Regime and Congress doing it, their actions are fundamentally racist. This was not lost on Judge William Young, an appointee of Ronald Reagan denounced the actions of the Regime in regards to Blacks, other racial minorities, and LGBTQ+ people saying, “I’ve never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable. I’ve sat on this bench now for 40 years. I’ve never seen government racial discrimination like this…” He also stated, “You are bearing down on people of color because of their color, the Constitution will not permit that. … Have we fallen so low? Have we no shame?” The words were damning, and true. After 160 years a revanchist Regime seeks to undo every bit of progress over that time.
Back to Juneteenth.
The armies of Robert E. Lee and Joseph Johnson had surrendered two months before General Granger’s soldiers went ashore in Galveston. Federal troops caught Confederate President Jefferson Davis on May 10th near Irwindale, Georgia, and on May 26th the Confederacy’s last major military command, General Kirby Smith’s Department of the Trans-Mississippi surrendered. All that remained was for Federal troops to take control of the areas of the Confederacy not occupied, the last being Texas.
The Confederacy might have surrendered and slavery officially ended, but violence perpetrated against newly free Blacks continued, as did slavery by another name, that of the Black Codes, which came into being in late 1865 and 1866. These laws allowed Blacks without a job or residence to be charged with vagrancy and then rented out to former slave owners, often on the plantations where they had been enslaved. They were also rented out to railroads, iron mines, and as work crews. In all cases their lot was as bad as it had been under slavery. Additionally, violence against Blacks in the former Confederacy committed by the Ku Klux Klan and other terrorist paramilitaries killed thousands of Blacks, destroying their homes, churches, neighborhoods, and towns. Massacres were committed in Memphis and Vicksburg and the towns of Hamburg, South Carolina and Colfax, Louisiana were destroyed, and hundreds killed with the rest driven from their homes, Hamburg no longer exists. These paramilitaries also targeted the Reconstruction governments, assassinated Black politicians and other officials, as well as White politicians, teachers, and others trying to help Blacks.
The Colfax Massacre. Blacks trying to defend themselves in the courthouse
Reconstruction ended in 1877 in a deal to elect Rutherford Hayes over Samuel Tilden in a highly disputed election. By 1890 almost all the gains achieved during Reconstruction were over. Decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court including Cruikshank v. United States (1876) which limited the protections offered by the 14th Amendment to direct actions of government officials or agencies freeing the terrorist paramilitaries and private citizens to do their worst. In the Civil Rights Cases (1883) the Supreme Court in an 8-1 decision struck down the Equal Protection Clause in the 14th Amendment saying that while it prohibited discrimination by state and local governments that the Federal Government did not have the power to prohibit discrimination by private individuals or organizations. It also stated that while the 13th Amendment ended “the badge of slavery” it did not prevent racial discrimination in public accommodations.
In 1894 the Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that segregation as legal so long as “separate but equal” accommodations were provided. This led to decades of segregation and discrimination, not only in the former Confederate states, but throughout the United States, and even after Plessy was overturned in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, governors in many Southern States worked to continue segregation, and many private Protestant Christian schools were founded so White children would not have to attend school with Black children. One of the early leaders of this movement was the late Jerry Falwell.
Violence against Blacks continued during the 1950s and 1960s especially attacks on Civil Rights workers and leaders, including the assassinations of leaders like Medgar Evers, the Rev. George Lee, and the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. Many others were brutally murdered during the same time period. Perhaps the most infamous occurred 60 years ago today. Three young civil rights workers, in Philadelphia, Mississippi. James Cheney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael (Mickey) Schwerner were investigating the burning of a Black Church which was active in voter registration.
Goodman, Schwerner, and Chaney were marked men from the moment they arrived in Philadelphia. As they left the town the three were arrested for an alleged traffic violation. They were briefly jailed and released that evening, but were not allowed to make any phone calls. On the way back to Meridian, two carloads of Klan members forced their car off the road and then abducted them and murdered them. The bodies were not discovered for 44 days when they were found buried in an earthen dam. Their disappearance brought national attention and a major investigation to the town. Eventually seven men, including Deputy Cecil Price were convicted of the murders. The murders and the investigation became the subject of the movie Mississippi Burning. The iconic American artist Norman Rockwell depicted the slayings in his painting Southern Justice.
Norman Rockwell’s Southern Justice
Racist violence against Blacks continued with the killing of nine Blacks a decade ago by a White Nationalist at the Emmanuel African Methodist Church in Charleston, SC, and too many other killings of Blacks by racist Whites, including the killings of George Floyd and Brianna Taylor.
Juneteenth needs to be a rallying point where we as Americans recommit to the ideals of the Declaration that “we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, among them, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”; and Lincoln’s words at Gettysburg which can be quite appropriately extended to all the other fallen in the war, including the African American soldiers whose sacrifices for liberties that they often did not enjoy benefited every American and those oppressed by Nazis, Communists, and other tyrants around the world.
Though it became a Federal holiday in 2021 when President Joe Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law and most states recognize it, there are some which do not allow it as a holiday even though they still recognize the birthdays of Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis. Likewise, some now prohibit teaching almost anything to do with Black history in order not to offend the descendants of slaver owners, Klansmen and other unpleasant characters. Florida under Governor Ron DeSantis has led the way in this. Thankfully, Alabama recognized it this week.
The Murder of George Floyd
However, the racist violence continues, the discrimination continues, and the Republican Party MAGA Movement is working to roll back voting rights, education, healthcare, and employment advances designed to bring Blacks and other racial minorities an equal opportunity for what White people, especially those well off who feel threatened by equality for those with darker skin than them.
If you are interested in learning more about what I touched on in this article please get a copy of my book, Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory: Religion and the Politics of Race in the Civil War Era and Beyond. It is available with a personal inscription from me, with an annual or founding member subscription. You can also purchase it from the publisher, Potomac Books of the University of Nebraska Press, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, as well as many other retailers. The link to Amazon is here, please note that the price there fluctuates wildly from the publisher’s price to whatever they sell it for on a given day.
Steven, has anyone ever come up with an explanation of "WHY?!!!"
Why IS "racial prejudice" in America so widespread - and so vicious?
I don't think there is another country in the world where the racial hatred is so deep and so obvious.
Racism is present in some form or another in many countries - usually based on skin tone, but not always. But those prejudices range from slight, almost "jokey" to impinging on your life chances.
In America, it seems to be visceral.
And once again, one has to ask "Why?" It's not as if the African peoples were once invaders, or top of the pile, who treated people badly and have now fallen low.
Without the labor of colored slaves and immigrants, America would still be an agrarian society. With a bit of luck, they might have become another New Zealand.
Americans of all colors have so much to be grateful for to the people of all colors who built the country - so why, why, WHY do so many white Americans feel that hatred and despite for people whose skin does not match their own?
The only explanation I can think of is guilt. Slavery was an abomination. Admitting that means admitting your ancestors sinned. And the thought of that, instead of engendering remorse, in some Americans simply engenders rage.
Is this really a surprise? As the standard of living for many continues to decline, the elites are encouraging divisions to distract the masses from what is really happening. Reich had an interesting blog today on the impact that Trump's policies with have on the cost of housing, which is just going to get massively worse. At the same time, some AI fanatics are saying that half of all entry level jobs in the US will disappear in the next five years. Nothing adds up. Unless one wants the world to explode in the mythological wish for a "second coming."