Last week Massachusetts became the 24th state to make Juneteenth (June 19th) a state holiday. Juneteenth celebrates the final state, Texas's adoption of Lincoln's emancipation proclamation 0f 1863.
It got me to think of my family history as my family originates from Massachusetts. I am fortunate to have a detailed family tree which extensively goes back to 1557. My family, (specifically) Francis Cooke came to the new world in 1620 on the Mayflower. Through marriage with the Nash family I also know Jacob Nash who was a Minute Man. He answered the Lexington Alarm of Paul Revere on April 19, 1775 and fought in the American Revolution.
But its the story of Daniel Lorenzo Nash, born in 1843 which brings me back to the achievement now celebrated as Juneteenth. Daniel Nash who joined the Union Army in 1861 has written extensively about his life. As I reviewed some of those writings I came across his recounting at the age of seven of the moment he realized that his fathers hotel in Troy Ohio was a stop on the underground railroad. Here is the original document:
For my family and myself, it is history come alive and made personal. Daniel Nash was later as an adult injured soon after joining the army, he later rejoined in 1864 and was there until the conclusion of the war. 970,000 lives were lost during the civil war but June 19th 1865 the last of 3.5 million slaves became freemen.
JUNETEENTH. On June 19 ("Juneteenth"), 1865, Union general Gordon Granger read the Emancipation Proclamation in Galveston, thus belatedly bringing about the freeing of the last remaining 250,000 slaves in Texas. The tidings of freedom reached slaves gradually as individual plantation owners read the proclamation to their bondsmen over the months following the end of the war. Particular celebrations of Juneteenth have had unique beginnings or aspects. In the state capital Juneteenth was first celebrated in 1867 under the direction of the Freedmen's Bureau and became part of the calendar of public events by 1872. There are now 24 states that celebrate this as a state holiday.
Note: All images and text (not specified) is copyrighted by Christopher Cushman.
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