Reading Proclamation 1863
(Watercolor by Henry Louis Stephens)
www.BlackPastBlog.org/
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Hazel Singer
Slavery has been a component of social and political organization since,
at a least, recorded history. January 1, 2014 is the 151st anniversary
of the Emancipation Proclamation
issued by US President Abraham Lincoln. It has been a long struggle, in
fits and starts, to end this abhorrent
practice of one group of human beings controlling another. Today,
slavery still exists for many people in our world. As we contemplate
that very sad state of affairs and realize that the struggle never ends,
we can hope that many more will celebrate freedom as African Americans
did on January 1, 1863, listening to the sermon of Reverend Jonathan C.
Gibbs titled "Freedom's Joyful Day".
One of the most important steps to eradicating this
institution, both as an acceptable practice and as an ideology, took
place 86 years before President Lincoln's proclamation, in 1777 in Vermont.
Vermont State Constitution |
Lawmakers enshrined the abolition of slavery in the constitution
of Vermont State. From the 1790s to 1804, the other New England states
followed suit to varying degrees: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island, Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey. While these actions did
not result in the actual freeing of large numbers of enslaved people,
they did set in motion the drumbeat of abolition and, ultimately, the
Civil War and the Civil Rights Movements. The actions by these New
England states have come to be collectively called the First
Emancipation.
Subsequent to this First Emancipation, there were four more milestones. In 1862, the District of Columbia
passed an Emancipation Act. Various Native American Nations had also
engaged in practices of enslaving people defeated in battle. The Cherokee Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 provided safe haven for people fleeing slavery and abolished all slavery on Cherokee territory. The Loyal Creek Council
decided, on August 4th, 1865, that African Creeks were considered full
citizens of the Creek Nation. African Creeks established August 4th as
Emancipation Day. In 1864, the Texas Emancipation Proclamation was declared by Major General Gordon Granger and came to be known as Juneteenth.
Texas Emancipation Proclamation |
The importance of all the Emancipation Declarations is the enshrinement
into signed documents and the law that the treatment of humans as
chattel is immoral, unconscionable, and impermissible. The long term
consequences of this are invaluable. In the past,
in various parts of the world, slaves and their descendants could be
freed, released, incorporated into the population. There were laws in
some eras and some places regulating these actions. But codifying
freedom, declaring slavery an abomination, this was something entirely
different.
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