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Emancipation Day

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Emancipation Day is observed in many former European colonies in the Caribbean and areas of the United States on various dates to commemorate the emancipation of slaves of African descent.

In much of the formerly British territories in the Caribbean Emancipation Day is marked on 1 August, commemorating the anniversary of the Slavery Abolition Act 1833. On 1 August 1985, Trinidad and Tobago became the first independent country to declare Emancipation Day as a public holiday to commemorate the abolition of slavery. Historically, 1 August was known as West Indian Emancipation Day and it became a key mobilisation tool and holiday for the antislavery movement in the United States.[1]

It is also observed in other areas in regard to the abolition of other forms of involuntary servitude.

Trinidad and Tobago

[edit]

On 1 August 1985, Trinidad and Tobago, as an independent country, became the first former British territory to declare a national holiday to commemorate the abolition of slavery.[2]

In Trinidad and Tobago, Emancipation Day replaced Columbus Discovery Day, which commemorated the arrival of Christopher Columbus at Moruga on 31 July 1498, as a national public holiday.[3][4]

The commemoration begins the night before with an all-night vigil and includes religious services, cultural events, street processions past historic landmarks, addresses from dignitaries including an address from the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago and ends with an evening of shows that include a torchlight procession to the national stadium.[5][6]

August 1

[edit]
Political history of the Caribbean and Central America, 1830

The Slavery Abolition Act 1833, which abolished slavery throughout the British Empire (with the exceptions "of the Territories in the Possession of the East India Company", the "Island of Ceylon" and "the Island of Saint Helena"; the exceptions were eliminated in 1843), came into force the following year, on 1 August 1834.

The legislation only freed slaves below the age of six. Enslaved people older than six years of age were redesignated as "apprentices" and required to work, 40 hours per week without pay, as part of compensation payment to their former owners. Full emancipation was finally achieved at midnight on 31 July 1838.[7]

The holiday is known as August Monday in Guyana, Dominica, The Bahamas, The Virgin Islands, and Saint Lucia, among other territories, as it's commemorated on the first Monday in August.

Antigua and Barbuda

[edit]

Antigua and Barbuda celebrates carnival on and around the first Monday of August. Since 1834 Antigua and Barbuda have observed the end of slavery. The first Monday and Tuesday in August was observed as a bank holiday so the populace can celebrate Emancipation Day. Monday is J'ouvert, a street party that mimics the early morning emancipation.

Anguilla

[edit]

Anguilla: In addition to commemorating emancipation, it is the first day of "August Week", the Anguillian Carnival celebrations. J'ouvert is celebrated 1 August, as Carnival commences.

The Bahamas

[edit]

The Bahamas: Celebrations are mainly concentrated in Fox Hill Village, Nassau, a former slave village whose inhabitants, according to folklore, heard about their freedom a week after everyone else on the island. The celebration known as the Bay Fest, beginning on 1 August and lasting several days, is held in the settlement of Hatchet Bay on the island of Eleuthera, and "Back to the Bay" is held in the settlement of Tarpum Bay, also on Eleuthera.

Barbados

[edit]

Emancipation Day in Barbados is part of the annual "Season of Emancipation", which began in 2005. The Season runs from 14 April to 23 August.[8][9] Commemorations include:

Emancipation Day celebrations usually feature a walk from Independence Square in Bridgetown to the Heritage Village at the Crop Over Bridgetown Market on the Spring Garden Highway. At the Heritage Village, in addition to a concert, there is a wreath-laying ceremony as a tribute to the ancestors. Traditionally, the Prime Minister, the Minister for Culture, and representatives of the Commission for Pan African Affairs are among those laying wreaths.

Belize

[edit]

Starting in 2021, Belize joined other Caribbean nations in observing Emancipation Day on 1 August to commemorate the emancipation of enslaved people in the Caribbean in 1834.[10]

Bermuda

[edit]

Bermuda celebrates its Emancipation Day on the Thursday before the first Monday in August, placing it in either July or August.[11]

Cup Match

[edit]

Emancipation Day is marked by the Cup Match, a two-day public holiday and cricket match, played by residents of the island, is unique to Bermuda. Cup Match started when members of Friendly Societies and Lodges in Somerset in the west and St. George's Parish, in the east, gathered to mark the anniversary of the abolition of slavery. In 1902 a silver cup was introduced to the tournament, and that year the first official Cup Match cricket match was played on 12 June 1902. In the Public Holidays Act 1947 national public holidays were introduced on the Thursday and Friday before the first Monday in August, they were named Cup Match Day and Somers Day (named after George Somers, the founder of Bermuda).[12] In 1999 Cup Match Day was renamed Emancipation Day, and Somers Day was renamed Mary Prince Day in February 2020 to remember Bermudan writer and enslaved woman Mary Prince.[13]

British Virgin Islands

[edit]

British Virgin Islands: The first Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of August are celebrated as "August Festival".

Canada

[edit]

In March 2021, the Canadian House of Commons voted unanimously on a motion to recognize 1 August as Emancipation Day across Canada. However, African-Canadian communities have commemorated Emancipation Day since the 1800s, most notably Black communities in the towns of Windsor, Owen Sound, Amherstburg, and Sandwich, in Ontario, and provinces including New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.[14]

The first of August marks the day the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 ended slavery in the British Empire in 1834 and, thus, also in Canada. However, the first colony in the British Empire to have anti-slavery legislation was Upper Canada, now Ontario. John Graves Simcoe, the first Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada, passed the 1793 Act Against Slavery, banning the importation of slaves and mandating that children born to enslaved women would be enslaved until they were 25 years old, as opposed to in perpetuity.[15] This was the first jurisdiction in the British Empire to abolish the slave trade and limit slavery.[16] The Act Against Slavery was superseded by the Slavery Abolition Act.

In 2022, the celebrations of Emancipation Day in Canada were declared a National Historic Event by Parks Canada.[17]

Nova Scotia

[edit]

Emancipation Day was set on 1 August by the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia on 13 April 2021. The event is marked with a provincial ceremony, as well as community-led events. Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia Arthur LeBlanc said in 2022, "as a province, we come together to renew our commitment to equity, peace, and dignity for all. We continue to structure our institutions and communities around the value of inclusion so that past harms are not repeated." The province also recognizes 23 August as the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition, in recognition of people of African descent in Haiti and the Dominican Republic fighting for their freedom in 1791.[18]

Ontario

[edit]
Moses Brantford Jr. leading an Emancipation Day parade down Dalhousie Street, Amherstburg, Ontario, 1894

In 2008, the provincial legislature designated 1 August as Emancipation Day. The act of parliament stated in its preamble: "it is important to recognize the heritage of Ontario’s Black community and the contributions that it has made and continues to make to Ontario. It is also important to recall the ongoing international struggle for human rights and freedom from repression for persons of all races, which can be best personified by Lieutenant Governor John Graves Simcoe and Dr Martin Luther King Jr. Accordingly, it is appropriate to recognize 1 August formally as Emancipation Day and to celebrate it."[19]

Notable Emancipation Day commemoriation include The Big Picnic, organised by the Toronto Division of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), which attracted thousands of attendees from the 1920s through to the 1950s. The first The Big Picnic was held in 1924, at Lakeside Park, in the community of Port Dalhousie.[20]

In 1932, the first Emancipation Day Parade was held in Windsor and would come to be known as the "greatest freedom show on Earth". Organized by Walter Perry, the parade and festival boasted famous guests like Martin Luther King Jr, Mary McLeod Bethune, Stevie Wonder, Benjamin Mays, Fred Shuttlesworth, Martha Reeves and The Vandellas, and Eleanor Roosevelt. Though Perry's death in 1968 had a significant influence on the end of the tradition, fears over the Detroit Riot of 1967 caused the city's councillors to deny organizers necessary permits to stage an Emancipation Day celebration.[21][22] Owen Sound has celebrated Emancipation with a picnic for 157 years, and now holds an Emancipation Festival.[16]

Toronto hosts the Toronto Caribbean Carnival (known as Caribana until 2006), which is held the first Saturday in August of Civic Holiday, observed on the first Monday of August. Started in 1967, it is a two-week celebration culminating in the long weekend, with the Kings and Queens Festival, Caribana parade, and Olympic Island activities.

Dominica

[edit]

Dominica: The first Monday is celebrated as August Monday. It marks the end of slavery in 1834.[23]

Grenada

[edit]

Grenada: The first Monday in August is celebrated as Emancipation Day with Cultural activities.

Guyana

[edit]

Guyana: The first of August is celebrated as Emancipation Day with Cultural activities, and events; including family gathering where they cook traditional food such as cook-up.

Jamaica

[edit]
Redemption Song by Laura Facey (2003), Emancipation Park, Kingston, Jamaica

1 August, Emancipation Day in Jamaica is a public holiday and part of a week-long cultural celebration, during which Jamaicans also celebrate Jamaica Independence Day on 6 August 1962. Both 1 August and 6 August are public holidays.

Emancipation Day had stopped being observed as a nation holiday in 1962 at the time of independence.[24] It was reinstated as a national public holiday under The Holidays (Public General) Act 1998 after a six-year campaign led by Rex Nettleford, among others.[9][25][26]

Traditionally people would keep at vigil on 31 July and at midnight ring church bell and play drums in parks and public squares to re-enact the first moments of freedom for enslaved Africans.[27] On Emancipation Day there is a reenactment of the reading of the Emancipation Declaration in town centres especially Spanish Town which was the seat of the Jamaican government when the Emancipation Act was passed in 1838.

Emancipation Park, a public park in Kingston, opened on the eve of Emancipation Day, 31 July in 2002, is named in commemoration of Emancipation Day.[28][29]

Saint Kitts and Nevis

[edit]

Saint Kitts and Nevis: The first Monday and Tuesday of August are celebrated as "Emancipation Day" and also "Culturama" in Nevis.

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

[edit]

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines also celebrates Emmancipation day annually on August 1.

The Act for the Abolition of Slavery in St. Vincent was transmitted to Britain on May 28, 1834. On the first of August in the year 1834, a total of 18,102 individuals who were previously enslaved transitioned into the status of apprentices.

A total of 2,959 children under the age of six were promptly released, along with 1,189 individuals who were either elderly or physically unable to care for themselves.

The enslaved individuals residing on the island of St. Vincent (SVG) were granted “complete emancipation” on August 1, 1838, following a period of “partial freedom” that was initially granted to them in 1834 through the enactment of the Abolition Act.[30] [31]

South Africa

[edit]
Emancipation Day celebrations in Greenmarket Square, Cape Town at midnight, 1 December 2016

The Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 came into full effect in the Cape Colony on the 1 December 1838, after a four-year period of forced apprenticeship. About 39,000 enslaved people were freed and £1.2 million[32] (roughly equivalent to £4,175,000,000 as a proportion of GDP in 2016 pounds)[33] – of £3 million originally set aside by the British government – was paid out in compensation to 1,300 former slave holding farmers in the colony.[32]

1 December is celebrated as Emancipation Day in South Africa most notably in the city of Cape Town.[34]

French West Indies

[edit]

This includes eight territories currently under French sovereignty in the Antilles islands of the Caribbean:

  • Martinique commemorates emancipation with a national holiday on 22 May, [35] marking the slave resistance on that day in 1848 that forced Governor Claude Rostoland to issue a decree abolishing slavery.[36]
  • Guadeloupe commemorates emancipation on 27 May.[37]
  • Saint Martin has a week-long celebration around 27 May, commemorating the abolition of slavery.[38]

Central America

[edit]

On the Caribbean Coast of Nicaragua the emancipation of slavery took place in the month of August 1841 but with different dates.

Bluefields and Pearl Lagoon received their emancipation on 10 August 1841.

Corn Island received its emancipation on 27 August 1841.

Suriname – 1 July

[edit]

On 1 July, Keti Koti (Sranantongo: "the chain is cut" or "the chain is broken")[39] is celebrated that marks Emancipation Day in Suriname, a former colony of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It marks the date when slavery was abolished in Suriname in 1863. The day also remembers that enslaved people in Suriname would not be fully free until 1873, after a mandatory 10-year transition period during which time they were required to work on the plantations for minimal pay and with state sanctioned force.[40] On 1 July 1955, Keti Koti officially became a public holiday in Suriname.[41]

United States

[edit]

District of Columbia – 16 April

[edit]

The District of Columbia observes 16 April as Emancipation Day. On 16 April 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act, an act of Compensated emancipation, for the release of certain persons held to service or labor in the District of Columbia.[42] The Act, introduced by Massachusetts senator and ardent abolitionist Henry Wilson, freed about 3,100 slaves in the District of Columbia nine months before President Lincoln issued his broader Emancipation Proclamation.[43] The District of Columbia Compensated Emancipation Act represents the only example of compensation by the federal government to former owners of emancipated slaves.[44]

On 4 January 2005, Mayor Anthony A. Williams signed legislation making Emancipation Day an official public holiday in the District.[45] Although Emancipation Day occurs on 16 April, by law when 16 April falls during a weekend, Emancipation Day is observed on the nearest weekday.[46] This affects the Internal Revenue Service's due date for tax returns, which traditionally must be submitted by 15 April. As the federal government observes the holiday, it causes the federal and all state tax deadlines to be moved to 18 April if Emancipation Day falls on a Saturday or Sunday and to 17 April if Emancipation Day falls on a Monday.[47] Each year, activities are now held during this observed holiday, including the traditional Emancipation Day parade. The parade had taken place yearly from 1866 to 1901.[48] After a 101-year hiatus, DC's parade resumed in 2002, just three years ahead of the new holiday.[49]

Florida – 20 May

[edit]
Emancipation Day Parade in Lincolnville, Florida in the 1920s

The state of Florida observes emancipation in a ceremonial day on 20 May. In the capital, Tallahassee, Civil War re-enactors playing the part of Major General Edward McCook and other union soldiers act out the speech General McCook gave from the steps of the Knott House on 20 May 1865.[50] This was the first reading of the Emancipation Proclamation in Florida.[51]

Georgia – Saturday closest to 29 May

[edit]

Thomaston, Georgia, has been the site of an Emancipation Day celebration since May 1866. Organizers believe it is "the oldest, continuously observed annual emancipation event in the United States."[52] The annual event is scheduled for the Saturday closest to 29 May. William Guilford was an early organizer of the event first held in 1866.

Kentucky and Tennessee – 8 August

[edit]
"Celebration at Greeneville," organized by Sam Johnson, "late a slave of Andrew Johnson," article published on page 4 of the Knoxville Daily Chronicle, 9 August 1871

Emancipation Day is celebrated on 8 August in Hopkinsville, Christian County; Paducah, McCracken County; and Russellville, Logan County Kentucky, as well as other communities in western Kentucky and for many years in Southern Illinois in Hardin County. According to the Paducah Sun newspaper, this is the anniversary of the day slaves in this region learned of their freedom in 1865. According to a PBS documentary, it celebrates the liberation of the people enslaved by U.S. President Andrew Johnson, one of whom started the annual celebration in eastern Tennessee.[53][54]

In 1938, William A. Johnson, who was born enslaved to Andrew Johnson in 1858, spoke at a Tennessee Emancipation Day celebration at Chilhowee Park.[55]

Johnson is one of the last surviving slaves in this section. 1 January was designated as Emancipation day but Andrew Johnson freed his slaves 8 August and Negroes of East Tennessee have always observed that date as Emancipation day. The celebration this year has been changed to 9 August because 8 August is on Sunday.[55]

Maryland – 1 November

[edit]

Emancipation Day is celebrated in Maryland on 1 November. Maryland started officially recognizing Emancipation Day in 2013, when then-Governor Martin O’Malley signed a measure to celebrate the freeing of slaves in Maryland on 1 November . Slavery was abolished in Maryland just six months before the end of the Civil War. Maryland's slavery abolishment also was approved two months before the U.S. Constitution's 13th Amendment was passed by Congress, and a full year before the 13th Amendment was ratified.[56]

On 1 November 2020, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan issued a proclamation recognizing Maryland Emancipation Day. "156 years ago, a new state constitution abolished slavery in Maryland. I have issued a proclamation recognizing Maryland Emancipation Day as we reflect on the legacies of the brave Marylanders who risked everything so that they and others might enjoy the promise of freedom."[57]

On 30 October 2020, Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich and County Council President Sidney Katz, on behalf of the entire Council, presented a joint proclamation Friday proclaiming Sunday, 1 November, as “Emancipation Day” in Montgomery County.[56]

Massachusetts - 8 July

[edit]

Massachusetts Emancipation Day, also known as Quock Walker Day, was established by the state legislature in 2022 and first legally observed statewide in 2023.[58] It was observed in the town of Lexington starting in 2020.[58] The observance commemorates the 1783 decision in the freedom suit of Quock Walker, which found slavery to be an unenforceable legal arrangement under the 1780 Massachusetts Constitution. Massachusetts became the first state to record zero slaves in the federal census of 1790, as slavery was abandoned in favor of indentured servitude or paid employment.[58]

Mississippi – 8 May

[edit]

In Columbus, Mississippi, Emancipation Day is celebrated on 8 May, known locally as "Eight o' May". As in other southern states, the local celebration commemorates the date in 1865 when African Americans in eastern Mississippi learned of their freedom.[59]

Though the 13th amendment was ratified by the necessary three-quarters vote, Mississippi withheld its ratification document after the constitutional amendment was submitted to the states. Mississippi finally submitted the ratification document on 7 February 2013.[60][61]

South Carolina – 1 January

[edit]

In South Carolina, Emancipation Day is celebrated on 1 January. There are two reasons for the date. First, 1 January 1808, marked an official end to United States participation in the Atlantic slave trade. Additionally, on 1 January 1863, Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson read the Emancipation Proclamation, which went into effect on that day, to the members of the 1st South Carolina Volunteer Infantry Regiment (Colored), which at the time was stationed in coastal South Carolina.[62][63]

Texas – 19 June

[edit]

In Texas, Emancipation Day is celebrated on 19 June. It commemorates the announcement in Texas of the abolition of slavery made on that day in 1865. It is commonly known as Juneteenth. Since the late 20th century, this date has gained recognition beyond Texas, and became a federal holiday in 2021.

Virginia – 3 April

[edit]
Emancipation Day, April 3, in Richmond, Virginia, 1905

In Richmond, Virginia, 3 April is commemorated as Emancipation Day. 3 April marks the day, in 1865, that Richmond fell to the Union Army, who were led by the United States Colored Troops.[64]

Territories

[edit]

Puerto Rico – 22 March

[edit]

Puerto Rico celebrates Emancipation Day (Día de la Abolición de Esclavitud), an official holiday, on 22 March. Slavery was abolished in Puerto Rico in 1873 while the island was still a colony of Spain.[65]

US Virgin Islands – 3 July

[edit]
Statue of Buddhoe at Fort Frederik, St. Croix

The United States Virgin Islands celebrates V.I. Emancipation Day (Danish West Indies Emancipation Day) as an official holiday on 3 July. It commemorates the Danish Governor Peter von Scholten's 1848 proclamation that "all unfree in the Danish West Indies are from today emancipated," following a slave rebellion led by John Gottlieb (Moses Gottlieb, General Buddhoe) in Frederiksted, Saint Croix.[66]

In addition to recognizing Emancipation Day, since 2017 the full week leading up to 3 July has been recognized as Virgin Islands Freedom Week.[67] Emancipation Day, Freedom Week, and the culmination of St. John Festival are celebrated throughout the U.S. Virgin Islands with concerts, dancing, workshops, a historical skit, and a reenactment of the walk to Fort Frederik.[68]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kerr-Ritchie, Jeffrey R. (2011). Rites of August First: Emancipation Day in the Black Atlantic World. LSU Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-4364-3.
  2. ^ "Emancipation Day". National Library and Information System Authority, Trinidad and Tobago. Archived from the original on 9 August 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. ^ Sookraj, Radhica (2011). "Moruga residents celebrate Emancipation, Discovery day". Trinidad and Tobago Guardian. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  4. ^ Schramm, Katharina (2016). African Homecoming: Pan-African Ideology and Contested Heritage. Routledge. p. 150. ISBN 9781315435404.
  5. ^ "Trinidad and Tobago Emancipation Day." Holidays, Festivals, and Celebrations of the World Dictionary, edited by Helene Henderson, Omnigraphics, Inc., 5th edition, 2015. Credo Reference, http://cordproxy.mnpals.net/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/hfcwd/trinidad_and_tobago_emancipation_day/0?institutionId=4015 . Accessed 15 Jan 2018.
  6. ^ Winer, Lisa (2009). Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago: On Historical Principles. McGill-Queen. p. 327. ISBN 9780773576070.
  7. ^ "Emancipation". Black Presence: Asian and Black History in Britain 1500-1850. The National Archives.
  8. ^ Hutchinson, Nekaelia (14 April 2014). "Season of Emancipation Launched". Barbados Government Information Service. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  9. ^ a b Oldfield, J. R. (2007). Chords of Freedom: Commemoration, Ritual and British Transatlantic Slavery By J. R. Manchester University Press. p. 165. ISBN 9780719066658. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
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  11. ^ "Bermuda's Public Holidays in 2016, 2017 and 2018".
  12. ^ Nisbett, Khaliah (27 July 2018). "The Important Link between Cup Match and Emancipation in Bermuda". www.gov.bm. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  13. ^ Bell, Jonathan (23 July 2021). "One year late, Mary Prince Day will be celebrated at Cup Match". www.royalgazette.com. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  14. ^ Henry, Natasha L. (2010). Emancipation Day : celebrating freedom in Canada. Toronto: Natural Heritage Books. ISBN 978-1-55488-717-0.
  15. ^ "Upper Canadian Act of 1793 Against Slavery National Historic Event". Parks Canada. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  16. ^ a b Henry, Natasha L. (14 July 2014). "Slavery Abolition Act, 1833". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
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  21. ^ "'A huge part of our local history': A look back at Emancipation Day in Windsor". CBC News. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
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  23. ^ "Emancipation Day in Dominica in 2021". Office Holidays. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
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  25. ^ "How we celebrate Emancipation Day". Emancipation Park, Jamaica. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  26. ^ "Holidays (Public General) Act". Ministry of Justice. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  27. ^ Wilson, Amber (2004). Jamaica: The Culture. Crabtree Publishing. p. 14. ISBN 9780778793328. emancipation day jamaica.
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  30. ^ "Emancipation Day: Remembering the End of Slavery in St. Vincent (SVG)". August 2023.
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  32. ^ a b Anonymous (31 March 2011). "History of Slavery and early colonisation in SA timeline 1602-1841". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
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  34. ^ Pather, Ra'eesa. "Slaves: South Africa's first freedom fighters". The M&G Online. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
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  36. ^ Elisa Bordin and Anna Scacchi (eds), Transatlantic Memories of Slavery: Remembering the Past, Changing the Future, Cambria Press, 2015, p. 107.
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  38. ^ "St. Martin/St. Maarten Events, Calendar", FrenchCaribbean.com.
  39. ^ van Stipriaan, Alex (2006). "Between Diaspora TransNationalism and American Globalization A History of AfroSurinamese Emancipation Day". In Gowricharn, Ruben S. (ed.). Caribbean Transnationalism: Migration, Pluralization, and Social Cohesion. Lexington Books. ISBN 9780739113974.
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  45. ^ "District of Columbia Emancipation Day Amendment Act of 2004" (PDF).
  46. ^ DC Department of Human Resources from "Holiday Schedule (2011 Holiday Schedule)" Archived 2013-05-12 at the Wayback Machine
  47. ^ Staff report (12 April 2016). "The real reason why tax day was moved to 18 April". Tribune Media. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  48. ^ [1], DC Emancipation parades continued from 1866 to 1901.
  49. ^ [2], White House Historical Association - The city revived the parades in 2002 as a result of the research, lobbying and leadership of Ms. Loretta Carter-Hanes.
  50. ^ "Knott House Museum Exhibits & Programs". Archived from the original on 8 June 2007. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  51. ^ "Knott House Museum". Archived from the original on 27 May 2007. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  52. ^ "Emancipation Proclamation Celebration - Thomaston, Georgia". Archived from the original on 15 January 2017. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  53. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "8th of August: Tennessee's Celebration of Emancipation". YouTube.
  54. ^ "The Eighth of August: Emancipation Day in Tennessee". Tennessee Historical Society. 3 August 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  55. ^ a b "William Andrew Johnson speaks at August 8th Event, 1937". The Knoxville Journal. 6 August 1937. p. 3. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  56. ^ a b Staff, Source of the Spring (1 November 2020). "County, State Leaders Declare Emancipation Day". Source of the Spring. Retrieved 26 November 2020.
  57. ^ Twitter https://twitter.com/govlarryhogan/status/1322901708587048968. Retrieved 26 November 2020. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
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  59. ^ James Fallows (8 May 2014). "Emancipation Day Commemoration in Eastern Mississippi". The Atlantic. Retrieved 28 July 2018.
  60. ^ Ben Waldron (19 February 2013). "Mississippi Officially Abolishes Slavery, Ratifies 13th Amendment". ABC News. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  61. ^ "Constitutional Amendment Process". National Archives. 15 August 2016. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
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  63. ^ Kytle, Ethan J. (26 July 2022) [17 May 2016]. "Emancipation Day celebrations". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 19 June 2023. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  64. ^ Kimball, Gregg D. (1 November 2003). American City, Southern Place: A Cultural History of Antebellum Richmond. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-2546-0.
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