By Jay Whipple
Trend Magazine Online™
American History!
Re-published from a previous edition with 2021 updates...
Juneteenth is one of those holidays where as if you
ask most
Americans its premise they would respond with a resounding
"I
don't know." I too did not know until the
1990's when a former
business associate of mines spearheaded the celebration in
Charlotte,
NC.
That celebration was later revived by another business associate from
Africa
and is still in operation today. I attended an
all-Black/African-American grade
school in
Miami and we were well educated on our history by learning of
the contributions of
Black/African-American icons like abolitionist
Mr.
Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey (
Frederick Douglass), the underground
railroad's
Ms. Harriett Tubman (a.k.a.
Moses), inventor
Mr. George
Washington Carver (
The Peanut Man), and abolitionist
Ms. Isabella Baumfree (a.k.a.
Sojourner
Truth) to name a few. Unfortunately, I do not recall being taught anything
concerning this important holiday/event.
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I was quite surprise to recently learn that this important
piece of
American history has been at the forefront of celebrations on
the island of
Galveston,
Texas, since
1865 when the area
Slaves
were finally informed that they were in fact free to leave their perspective
plantations and seek the
American dream that includes
Life,
Liberty,
and
The Pursuit of Happiness per our
United
States Constitution. The delayed news was referred to as
General Order Number
3 and delivered by
Major General Gordon Granger. It was indeed great
news for some of the
250,000 Texas Slaves although the rest of our nation's
cities had been given the same message more than
five months earlier
after the
13th
Amendment was made official on
Tuesday January,
31,
1865,
and after the
Saturday April,
15,
1865, assassination of
then
President Abraham Lincoln of
Hodgenville,
Kentucky
by
John Wilkes Booth of
Bel Air,
Maryland.
Note: This year a colorful mural entitled
Absolute Equality will be dedicated to mark the spot of that historic announcement (see events below).
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Some will argue that the
Slaves in the
United
States were actually freed on
Monday September,
22,
1862,
after then
President Abraham Lincoln issued a preliminary document known as the
Emancipation
Proclamation which was a presidential order (known today as an Executive
Order) as opposed to a law signed by the
United States Congress. This
document proclaimed that
Slaves in certain
U.S. cities and
States
shall be freed on
Thursday January 1,
1863, which resulted in a
small portion of the
more
than four million enslaved
Blacks/Africans obtaining their freedom. This
new found freedom was a blessing for some and a curse for others who had grown
highly dependent on their masters' providing their food, clothing, and shelter
for nearly four centuries. As such, reportedly
40% of the
Slaves
in
North Carolina actually supported the
South/Confederacy during
the
Civil War (1861-1865) by maintaining the plantations, assisting the
Confederate troops, and some fighting side-by-side with their masters. This phenomenon is
known today as the
Stockholm syndrome as explained in my book
Charlotte
From A Tour Guide's Perspective.
"I freed a thousand slaves I could have
freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves" --
Harriett Tubman (now debated but you get the point right!).
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Thanks to various individuals, groups, businesses, and
not-for-profit organizations; this important piece of
American history
has been preserved since
Slavery was official abolished in
1865 more
than a
Century and a half ago. Some of those individuals/businesspersons
are
Doris and
Sam Collins III of
Hitchcock,
Texas,
which is approximately
15 miles (by car)
from the island of
Galveston.
In
2005 this dynamic duo purchased and restored a
19th
Century home that was once owned by
Mr. Henry Martyn Stringfellow, a
successful horticulturist from
1883 to his death in
1912 during
the period known today as
Reconstruction. He was well known for paying
former
Slaves $1 a day as opposed to the then going wage of
50
cents which afforded them a higher standard of living for their families.
Some went on to purchase land of their own from their wages derived from the orange
groves on the
9.5-acre property. The old post-antebellum home is now
listed in the
National Register of Historic Places (since
2013),
and has been part of the area
Juneteenth celebrations since
2006.
Several years ago the home was part of a
PBS special (21
st Minute)
focusing on the area.
Mr. Collins, 50 (June 2021), is a native of
Hitchcock and
is known today as a modern-day
Frederick Douglass (Abolitionist). He was
named
Citizen of the Year by the
Galveston County Daily News in
2015
for his many civic activities to include member or advisor for local, state,
and national historical organizations; investment services entrepreneur,
philanthropist, community organizer, and champion of the
150th
anniversary (2015) of
Juneteenth in the
Galveston area. He attended
Texas A&M University, on an
academic scholarship, and took a semester off to pursue several business opportunities -- one in which
involved selling water filters. He then accepted a position selling life
insurance after losing his job at
Walgreens.
Collins then started
his own business -- SLC Investment Services -- after stints with
Edward
Jones Investments and
Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, upon earning
his securities license. He did return to
Texas A&M, after a semester off, where he earned his
Bachelor's in
Business Administration/Accounting degree.
Collins later organized a trip to
Selma,
Alabama,
where our ancestors successfully spearheaded the signing of the
1965 Voting
Rights Act; however, fell short in his campaign to lure
President Barack
Obama to
Galveston for the
150th Anniversary of
Juneteenth
in
2015. His next big endeavor is to get
Juneteenth listed as
a national holiday.