What is Juneteenth, and why is it important? - Karlos K. Hill and Soraya Field Fiorio

519,031 views

2023-02-02 ・ TED-Ed


New videos

What is Juneteenth, and why is it important? - Karlos K. Hill and Soraya Field Fiorio

519,031 views ・ 2023-02-02

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:08
One day, while hiding in the kitchen,
0
8629
2461
00:11
Charlotte Brooks overheard a life-changing secret.
1
11090
2836
00:14
At the age of 17, she’d been separated from her family
2
14469
3628
00:18
and taken to William Neyland’s Texas Plantation.
3
18097
3087
00:21
There, she was made to do housework at the violent whims of her enslavers.
4
21434
4463
00:26
On that fateful day, she learned that slavery had recently been abolished,
5
26647
4255
00:31
but Neyland conspired to keep this a secret from those he enslaved.
6
31194
3712
00:35
Hearing this, Brooks stepped out of her hiding spot, proclaimed her freedom,
7
35531
4880
00:40
spread the news throughout the plantation, and ran.
8
40411
2961
00:44
That night, she returned for her daughter, Tempie.
9
44040
3420
00:47
And before Neyland’s spiteful bullets could find them, they were gone for good.
10
47877
4463
00:53
For more than two centuries,
11
53466
1543
00:55
slavery defined what would become the United States—
12
55009
3212
00:58
from its past as the 13 British colonies to its growth as an independent country.
13
58221
5881
01:04
Slavery fueled its cotton industry and made it a leading economic power.
14
64644
4337
01:09
10 of the first 12 presidents enslaved people.
15
69565
2962
01:13
And when US chattel slavery finally ended,
16
73027
2753
01:15
it was a long and uneven process.
17
75780
2544
01:19
Enslaved people resisted from the beginning—
18
79200
2336
01:21
by escaping, breaking tools, staging rebellions, and more.
19
81536
4629
01:26
During the American Revolution, Vermont and Massachusetts abolished slavery
20
86791
4338
01:31
while several states took steps towards gradual abolition.
21
91254
3211
01:35
In 1808, federal law banned the import of enslaved African people,
22
95174
4463
01:39
but it allowed the slave trade to continue domestically.
23
99887
2711
01:43
Approximately 4 million people were enslaved in the US
24
103307
3045
01:46
when Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860.
25
106352
3212
01:49
Lincoln opposed slavery, and though he had no plans to outlaw it,
26
109981
3712
01:53
his election caused panic in Southern states,
27
113693
2711
01:56
which began withdrawing from the Union.
28
116404
2085
01:58
they vowed to uphold slavery and formed the Confederacy,
29
118906
3587
02:02
triggering the start of the American Civil War.
30
122493
2628
02:05
A year into the conflict, Lincoln abolished slavery in Washington, D.C.,
31
125997
4045
02:10
legally freeing more than 3,000 people.
32
130209
2711
02:13
And five months later, he announced the Emancipation Proclamation.
33
133171
3837
02:18
It promised freedom to the 3.5 million people enslaved in Confederate states.
34
138426
4963
02:23
But it would only be fulfilled if the rebelling states didn’t rejoin the Union
35
143848
4129
02:27
by January 1st, 1863.
36
147977
2461
02:30
And it bore no mention of the roughly 500,000 people in bondage
37
150980
4087
02:35
in the border states of Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri
38
155067
5422
02:40
that hadn’t seceded.
39
160489
1877
02:42
When the Confederacy refused to surrender,
40
162617
2419
02:45
Union soldiers began announcing emancipation.
41
165036
3086
02:48
But many Southern areas remained under Confederate control,
42
168497
3045
02:51
making it impossible to actually implement abolition throughout the South.
43
171959
3963
02:56
The war raged on for two more years, and on January 31st, 1865,
44
176923
5880
03:02
Congress passed the 13th Amendment.
45
182803
2461
03:05
It promised to end slavery throughout the US—
46
185264
2544
03:07
except as punishment for a crime.
47
187808
1877
03:10
But to go into effect, 27 states would have to ratify it first.
48
190144
4129
03:15
Meanwhile, the Civil War virtually ended with the surrender
49
195191
3336
03:18
of Confederate General Robert E. Lee on April 9th, 1865.
50
198527
4630
03:23
But although slavery was technically illegal in all Southern states,
51
203866
3629
03:27
it still persisted in the last bastions of the Confederacy.
52
207620
3754
03:32
There, enslavers like Neyland continued to evade abolition until forced.
53
212333
4588
03:37
This was also the case when Union General Gordon Granger marched his troops
54
217255
4004
03:41
into Galveston, Texas, on June 19th
55
221259
2919
03:44
and announced that all enslaved people there were officially free—
56
224178
3712
03:47
and had been for more than two years.
57
227890
2669
03:50
Still, at this point, people remained legally enslaved in the border states.
58
230935
5547
03:56
It wasn’t until more than five months later, on December 6th, 1865,
59
236774
5506
04:02
that the 13th Amendment was finally ratified.
60
242488
2628
04:05
This formally ended chattel slavery in the US.
61
245866
3003
04:10
Because official emancipation was a staggered process,
62
250538
3086
04:13
people in different places commemorated it on different dates.
63
253624
3253
04:17
Those in Galveston, Texas, began celebrating “Juneteenth”—
64
257211
3587
04:20
a combination of “June” and “nineteenth”—
65
260965
2544
04:23
on the very first anniversary of General Granger’s announcement.
66
263509
3462
04:27
Over time, smaller Juneteenth gatherings gave way to large parades.
67
267430
4421
04:32
And the tradition eventually became
68
272143
1960
04:34
the most widespread of emancipation celebrations.
69
274103
3045
04:37
But, while chattel slavery had officially ended,
70
277606
3003
04:40
racial inequality, oppression, and terror had not.
71
280609
3879
04:44
Celebrating emancipation was itself an act of continued resistance.
72
284655
4129
04:49
And it wasn't until 2021 that Juneteenth became a federal holiday.
73
289160
5005
04:54
Today, Juneteenth holds profound significance as a celebration
74
294915
4130
04:59
of the demise of slavery, the righteous pursuit of true freedom for all,
75
299045
4587
05:03
and a continued pledge to remember the past and dream the future.
76
303883
4379
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7