Seattle:President Joe Biden this week signed legislation establishing a new federal holiday commemorating the end of slavery – a move lawmakers made for Washington state earlier this year. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee last month signed a measure making Juneteenth a legal state paid holiday, starting in 2022. In 2007, the Legislature had designated Juneteenth as a day of remembrance.
Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union soldiers brought the news of freedom to enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas — two months after the Confederacy had surrendered. That was also about 2 1/2 years after the Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in the Southern states. It’s the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr Day was created in 1983. One of the federal holidays, Inauguration Day, happens every four years.
Read:|Juneteenth takes on new meaning amid push for racial justice
As Biden was signing into law Thursday the bill recognizing Juneteenth as a federal holiday, a senior centre in Seattle was already celebrating the traditional African American holiday. Among the revellers was Larry Gossett, who is a former longtime King County council member and activist in Seattle. “I think that kind of recognition is long overdue. As an African-American who is a descendant of slaves from Texas, I am particularly thrilled by that recognition,” he said.