Updated at 3:36 p.m. ET
The weeks since the killing of George Floyd have been a cauldron of outrage, frustration and, at times, violence. But on Friday, brought another emotion to this simmering mixture: the joy of celebration.
Demonstrators planned rallies in and across the country, from Atlanta to Los Angeles, to commemorate the date that the U.S. informed people in Texas that all those enslaved were now free in 1865. Many of those marking that moment say has a new sense of urgency amid the swell of against police brutality and racial injustice.
"This celebration is tinted with sorrow because of the lives of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery. But there is hope — hope for the protests and the demonstrations that are going on. Hope that social justice will occur in this country and will occur soon," Stephen Holmes, county commissioner in Galveston, Texas, told attendees at a in that city.
It was there, on June 19, 1865 — more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed by President Abraham Lincoln — that Union soldiers announced and enforced the abolition of slavery in the state where many slaveowners had resisted emancipation.
More than a century afterward, in 1979, Texas became the first U.S. state to mark the date an by the name of Emancipation Day — with a bill authored by then-Texas state lawmaker Al Edwards.
"This is where it happened that African Americans received their freedom in the South, delivered by the word of the U.S. government," Al Edwards Jr. said at the event, which was held before a statue honoring his father in Galveston.
"It's not to be taken away from us. It's not to be muzzled or silenced or marginalized. It is Freedom Day for African Americans in the United States. It is our day. White, Black, Asian, Mexican-American — it is a United States holiday."
Forty-five other states and the District of Columbia have followed Texas' lead. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio Juneteenth would become a city and school holiday beginning next year, as did t, which has been struggling with the .
And a movement to designate it a federal holiday has been after several high-profile police killings of Black people trained widespread attention on racial injustice in the United States.
Thousands and thousands of people marching in Atlanta to celebrate Juneteenth and justice for and countless more
— Emily Green (@emilytgreen)
Thousands of people nationwide aren't waiting on that designation. Rallies have been organized in Seattle, New Orleans and Washington, D.C., among other places — even in Milledgeville, a town of nearly 20,000 that once was the before and during the Civil War.
Multiple cities — including — saw "Black Lives Matter" painted in vast murals akin to the one created this month on a two-block stretch of road in Washington.
“Black Lives Matter” is now painted on the street along Greenwood near Archer as we’re just a few hours from the Juneteenth event. More than 60 people spent the overnight hours painting this.
— Joseph Holloway (@jhollowaynews)
Meanwhile, in Tulsa, Okla., where President Trump plans to hold a campaign rally Saturday, people flocked to Juneteenth celebrations. Seth Bodine of NPR member station KOSU reported that local officials expect more than 100,000 people to gather in the city this weekend for the rally and other events.
Tulsa has a grim racial history. In 1921, white residents there killed more than 150 people — and possibly as many as 300 — in a spasm of violence directed at Black people, and they took a torch to the principally Black neighborhoods in the city.
The Rev. Al Sharpton is expected to deliver the keynote speech at a Juneteenth event Friday in Tulsa the family of Terence Crutcher, a local Black man in 2016. The officer who shot him during an arrest was later .
Dismantling a Christopher Columbus statue:
— Paige Southwick Pfleger (@PaigePfleger)
Elsewhere, the holiday coincided with another aspect of racial reckoning in the United States: the memorials across the country dedicated to Confederate leaders and other controversial figures.
In Columbus, capital of Ohio, that meant a statue dedicated to the city's controversial namesake, explorer Christopher Columbus, outside City Hall. In the nation's capital, that meant removing the portraits of who served in the Confederacy.
"We are especially encouraged by the steps taken to remove their portraits on the eve of Juneteenth — the day that will forever commemorate the emancipation of Black people from enslavement," Lecia Brooks of the Southern Poverty Law Center said in a statement shared with NPR.
"May this be one of many steps taken by our elected leaders to dismantle the structures of white supremacy that still remain all across our country."
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