R 313 |
2018 -- S 2969 Enacted 06/14/2018 |
S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N |
RECOGNIZING "JUNETEENTH NATIONAL FREEDOM DAY" ON JUNE 19, 2018 |
Introduced By: Senators Metts, Ruggerio, McCaffrey, Goodwin, and Quezada |
Date Introduced: June 14, 2018 |
WHEREAS, First observed one hundred and fifty-three years ago, Juneteenth National |
Freedom Day is the oldest and only African-American holiday observance in the United States; |
and |
WHEREAS, Also known as Emancipation Day, Emancipation Celebration, Freedom |
Day, Jun-Jun, and Juneteenth, Juneteenth National Freedom Day commemorates the strong |
survival instinct of African-Americans who were first brought to this country stacked in the |
bottom of slave ships in a month-long journey across the Atlantic Ocean known as the Middle |
Passage; and |
WHEREAS, Approximately eleven and one-half million African-Americans survived the |
voyage to the New World, with the number that died likely greater, and those who did survive |
were subjected to whipping, castration, branding, and rape, and were forced to submit to slavery |
for more than two hundred years after their arrival in the United States; and |
WHEREAS, Events in the history of the United States that led to the Civil War of 1861 |
centered around sectional differences between the North and South that were based on the |
economic and social divergence caused by the existence of slavery; and |
WHEREAS, Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated as President of the United States in 1861, |
and as President, Lincoln believed and stated that the paramount object of the Civil War was to |
save the Union rather than to save or destroy slavery; and |
WHEREAS, But Lincoln also stated his belief that all men everywhere should be free, |
thus adding to the growing anticipation of slaves that their ultimate liberation was at hand; and |
WHEREAS, In 1862, the first clear sign that the end of slavery was imminent came when |
laws abolishing slavery in the territories of Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, and New Mexico |
were passed; and |
WHEREAS, In September of that same year, President Lincoln warned the eleven |
rebellious Confederate States that if they did not return to the Union by January 1, 1863, he |
would declare their slaves forever free via the celebrated Emancipated Proclamation; and |
WHEREAS, Enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation, however, only occurred in |
Confederate States once they were under Union Army control and Congress subsequently passed |
the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution on January 31, 1865, abolishing slavery |
throughout the United States and its territories; and |
WHEREAS, News of this action reached the states at different times, and it was not until |
June 19 of 1865, that the message of freedom reached the slaves in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, |
Arkansas, and California; and |
WHEREAS, Spontaneous celebrations erupted throughout the country when African- |
Americans learned of their freedom; and |
WHEREAS, Juneteenth National Freedom Day celebrates the abolishment of slavery |
with excitement and great joy and is a reminder to all Americans of the status and importance that |
Americans of African descent hold as American citizens; now, therefore be it |
RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations |
hereby urges the citizens of the State of Rhode Island to recognize the historical significance of |
Juneteenth Independence Day and to observe Juneteenth National Freedom Day on June 19th; and |
be it further |
RESOLVED, That this Senate supports the annual celebration of Juneteenth National |
Freedom Day in order to provide an opportunity for the people of the state to learn more about |
our country’s past and to better understand the experiences that have shaped our nation; and be it |
further |
RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the Governor of the State of Rhode Island and |
Reverend Ronald V. Myers, Sr., M.D. |
======== |
LC005903 |
======== |