Juneteenth started as a local Texas celebration marking the end of slavery, but over 160 years later it has become a national holiday observed across the country, including throughout New Jersey.
When it comes to the abolition of slavery, New Jersey has nothing to write home about.
Every June 19, government offices, schools, businesses, and communities across New Jersey join millions of Americans in observing Juneteenth. While the holiday’s origins are deeply rooted in Texas history, its message of freedom and the completion of emancipation has resonated far beyond the Lone Star State.
Today, Juneteenth is recognized as a federal holiday, but its journey from a local Texas observance to a nationwide celebration took more than a century and a half.
A Texas Event With National Significance
Juneteenth commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and announced that enslaved people were free.
The announcement came more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863.
Because Texas was geographically isolated and had relatively few Union troops during much of the Civil War, many enslaved people remained in bondage despite the proclamation. It wasn’t until Union forces arrived after the war that emancipation was enforced in Texas.
“The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free,” Granger declared in General Order No. 3.
For thousands of enslaved Texans, it was the first official notice of their freedom.
Why America Celebrates Juneteenth
Although the event occurred in Texas, historians note that Juneteenth represents a national milestone.
The holiday marks the final major enforcement of emancipation in the former Confederacy and symbolizes the moment freedom became a reality for many enslaved Americans.
Supporters of the holiday often describe Juneteenth as a second Independence Day because it recognizes the expansion of liberty to people who were excluded from the freedoms celebrated on July 4, 1776.
Unlike many holidays created through legislation or presidential proclamations, Juneteenth grew from the grassroots level. Newly freed Black Texans began celebrating the anniversary in 1866 with church services, family gatherings, music, food, and public readings of emancipation orders.
Those traditions spread across the country as Black families migrated from the South to other states throughout the 20th century.
Why New Jersey Observes Juneteenth
While New Jersey was not part of the Confederacy, the state has its own complex history with slavery.
Even in the 1800s. New Jersey was very “New Jersey” in the way politicians dealt with sensitive political issues. Instead of calling them slaves, New Jersey called them “apprentices for life”.
New Jersey was the last Northern state to begin abolishing slavery, and forms of involuntary servitude continued here long after many residents realize. When the Civil War ended in 1865, New Jersey still had people legally classified as apprentices for life under state law.
Because of that history, many educators, historians, and civic leaders view Juneteenth as an opportunity to reflect on New Jersey’s own role in the nation’s struggle over slavery and civil rights.
Today, communities from Newark and Jersey City to Trenton, Camden, Atlantic City, Toms River, and Asbury Park host Juneteenth events that include festivals, educational programs, concerts, historical presentations, and community gatherings.
The holiday has become both a celebration and a teaching moment.
From Texas Tradition to National Holiday
For decades, Juneteenth remained largely a regional observance centered in Texas and parts of the South.
That began to change in 1980 when Texas became the first state to officially recognize Juneteenth as a state holiday.
Over the following decades, more states adopted formal recognition. Schools began teaching its history, museums created exhibits, and community organizations expanded annual celebrations.
Public awareness grew significantly after 2020 as national conversations about race and American history intensified.
Federal Recognition in 2021
On June 17, 2021, President Joe Biden signed legislation establishing Juneteenth National Independence Day as a federal holiday.
The law made Juneteenth the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was created nearly four decades earlier.
Today, federal offices close in observance of the holiday, and many state governments, including New Jersey, recognize Juneteenth as an official holiday.
More Than a Texas Story
The reason New Jersey celebrates Juneteenth is the same reason communities across America observe it: the holiday commemorates a pivotal moment in the nation’s long journey toward freedom and equality.
While the announcement that inspired Juneteenth took place in Galveston, Texas, the story it represents extends far beyond one state.
More than 160 years after Union troops arrived in Texas, Juneteenth has become a nationwide reminder that freedom was not experienced equally or simultaneously by all Americans—and that the struggle to secure those freedoms remains a defining part of the country’s history.
Key Points
• Juneteenth marks June 19, 1865, when Union troops informed enslaved people in Texas that they were free.
• New Jersey observes the holiday because it commemorates a major national milestone in the end of slavery and reflects the state’s own historical ties to slavery and civil rights.
• Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2021 after more than 150 years of grassroots celebrations that began in Texas.