19 photos of Juneteenth celebrations over the years

On Juneteenth 1970, the Black Panther Party staged a Revolutionary People's Constitutional Convention with the goal of drafting "a true people's constitution...that takes into account the ethnic and pluralistic nature of this society." One of the largest gatherings of radical leftists in U.S. history, the rally was attended by members of the Black Power, Asian American, Chicano, American Indian, Anti-War, Women's Liberation, and Gay Liberation movements.

Traditional Juneteenth spreads include barbecue, soul food, and anything red. The color red represents the blood of Black people who were enslaved and never experienced freedom, as well as the resilience and transformational power of Black people. Here, several celebrants enjoy hot dogs and sodas.

Parades have long been a Juneteenth tradition. Here, a mother and child watch a Unity March heading toward Houston's Hermann Park. Modern-day celebrants can attend Juneteenth parades in places like Atlanta, Philadelphia, and New York City.

A young boy watches a Juneteenth parade pass by. Early Juneteenth celebrations would not have been held on public land in this way, particularly in the South, where white authorities used Jim Crow laws to suppress celebrations.

Today, you can easily find Juneteenth decorations at party supply stores and big box retailers like Walmart. But before the holiday was federally recognized, few places had specific decorations for the day. Here, a store owner hangs flags in front of his variety shop in the days leading up to the holiday.

For Black people who were enslaved, dance was a way to remain connected to their cultures and roots. Many Juneteenth celebrations now include dance performances, like this one from the First Step troupe in Minneapolis, as a way of honoring those origins and the perseverance of the enslaved.

Two children enjoy a Juneteenth carnival with candy and temporary tattoos at Washington D.C.'s Anacostia Museum. Part of the Smithsonian Institution, the community-based museum displays exhibitions about African American history and culture. The Anacostia Museum still operates today and has one of the largest collections of Black historical artifacts in the country.

The Chairman of the Houston Chapter of the National Black United Front pours water on the ground during a Juneteenth "Pouring of Libation" ceremony. In this ritual, a drink is offered to the Creator, sacred ancestors, and the environment. Done in the spirit of remembrance, libation ceremonies appear in many community celebrations of Juneteenth.

Two people taste entries in the sweet potato pie cook-off contest during a Juneteenth celebration in Richmond, California. NPR reports that Black people who were enslaved had been cooking with sweet potatoes for centuries because the tubers are similar to yams, a root vegetable commonly eaten in West Africa. Over the years, dishes like sweet potato pie have become hallmarks of Black cuisine.

Juneteenth celebrants in Galveston, Texas, listen to a public reading of the Emancipation Proclamation to mark the holiday. Galveston still holds annual public readings of General Order No. 3 today. Back in 1865, Major General Gordon Granger read the order to the people of Galveston, stating, "The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves."

From Milwaukee to Savannah, communities have held Miss Juneteenth pageants for years. Although these beauty pageants often include traditional events like topical interviews, talent competitions, and scholarship awards, for many contestants, the contests hold a deeper meaning. "It's a reminder that I'm proudly Black and I'm happy about it and I'm strong," one former contestant told the New York Times in 2021. "A reminder that Black is beautiful. To be ourselves with the hate or without the hate that we experience. A reminder that we're free. We're here with a purpose."

A big part of Juneteenth is celebrating family legacies. Here, several generations in Oakland, California, pore over pictures in a Baptist Journal, possibly looking for photos of other family members, a few days before the city's Juneteenth celebrations.

People grill in a Boston park on Juneteenth. Segregation kept Black people out of public parks for years, but some communities created their own parks for the express purpose of celebrating Juneteenth. Houston's Emancipation Park, founded in 1872, is one example of a public space created as a place "for Black communities to gather and mark the jubilation of the end of slavery in the Confederacy."

At a Juneteenth celebration in Schenectady, New York's Central Park, a woman sells t-shirts as part of a local fundraiser. Vendors selling merchandise are a common sight at Juneteenth events. As in this case, proceeds sometimes go toward community causes.

Marchers wave a black, green, and red version of the American flag in a Philadelphia Juneteenth parade. The flag, which combines the colors of Jamaican activist Marcus Garvey's pan-African flag with the traditional structure of the American flag, was designed by artist David Hammons. According to the Smithsonian Institution, Hammons has said that "[Garvey's flag] is so abstract, so pure, that the masses were frightened by it. I made my flag because I felt that they needed one like the U.S. flag, but with black stars instead of white ones."

Thousands of protestors walked across the Brooklyn Bridge on Juneteenth, 2020, as part of the Unite NY 2020, Bringing All of New York Together rally and march for Black Lives Matter. The protest was intended to highlight the institutional racism that exists today in America and illustrate that while slavery ended in 1856, Black Americans still struggle for equality.

Two choir singers perform during Louisville's Juneteenth Festival in 2021. Songs like "Lift Every Voice and Sing," the unofficial Black National Anthem, often feature heavily in Juneteenth celebrations. The lyrics of the hymn, which was first performed for President Lincoln's birthday in 1900, "eloquently captured the solemn yet hopeful appeal for the liberty of Black Americans," according to the NAACP.

The Juneteenth flag was designed by activist Ben Haith in 1997 and reconfigured into its current form in 2000. The white star in the middle represents freedom and nods to the state of Texas (where Juneteenth began), the bursting outline represents a new beginning for all Black Americans, and the arc represents the new opportunities that lay ahead for Black Americans after slavery was abolished. The red, white, and blue coloring reminds us that those Black people who were enslaved, and their descendants, have always been Americans, even when the law didn't see them that way.

Representatives from the U.S Colored Troops and Buffalo Soldiers, a Maryland organization made up of historians and re-enactors, gather at the Lincoln Memorial to celebrate Juneteenth 2024. In 1866, the Army Reorganization Act created room for permanent Black regiments for the first time. A mix of Civil War veterans, freedmen, and formerly enslaved Black men, these cavalrymen were nicknamed "Buffalo Soldiers" by Indigenous people, both for their appearance and fighting skills.
Story editing by Cu Fleshman. Copy editing by Paris Close.
