Juneteenth is a celebration of Freedom Day, a holiday that commemorates the last enslaved African Americans in the United States being declared free. This year, a few people have taken to social media to share personal stories of their ancestors and to highlight how not so long ago slavery was. The common thread amongst them all is the resilience that flows through our DNA. We are truly our ancestors’ wildest dreams!
advertisementView this post on InstagramA post shared by WHITNEY ALESE (@thereclaimed) on
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I’ve shared this story before but the father of my great grandfather, Papa OJ, worked this East TX land as a slave. Now, my Uncle Bubba owns 44 acres of it. #Juneteenth pic.twitter.com/K4ED4KLTKW
— Gennette Cordova (@GNCordova) June 19, 2019
Today is #Juneteenth let’s put it into perspective. Of the 13 people pictured in this family photo, MY family photo, only the three young boys were never slaves. One of those boys is my great grandfather. I am my ancestor’s wildest dreams! pic.twitter.com/2wdCmrQg5L
— Karissa Culbreath (@KarissaPhD) June 19, 2019
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On #JUNETEENTH, a story….
advertisementMy Great Great Grandfather Rev. Pompey Lavallie was enslaved
as a boy.My Great Grandmother Rosa Lavallie made a quilt with patches from his “britches.”
My Grandma Rosa Lee put me to sleep under his quilt
as a boy.advertisementWas slavery that long ago? pic.twitter.com/FYFRmCkXMm
— Rev. Cornell William Brooks (@CornellWBrooks) June 19, 2019
This is my grandmother. Born in Goodwill, Texas 106 years ago. She is very much alive. Her grandfather was born enslaved and was freed on #Juneteenth. She can recall family accounts of slavery. This is recent history. American history. #Reparations pic.twitter.com/9fRnbafzQZ
— Sonya Childress (@SonyaChildress) June 19, 2019
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In commemorating this day, I share images of my great-great grandmother born a slave & died free and her son my great grandfather, a son of the plantation owner, who went on to own his own farm as a free man. Their endurance & dignity are two of my greatest prides. #Juneteenth pic.twitter.com/155DEV6ghY
advertisement— Charniele Herring (@C_Herring) June 19, 2019
advertisementHappy Juneteenth!! My great-great-great grandmother’s official freedom papers! I am forever grateful for you! ✊ pic.twitter.com/GHkCCwk6PL
— Sativa Princess ♂️✨ (@_angelesque) June 19, 2019
Daddy with his Great Grandmother Eliza in Gonzales TX in the early 1920s. Born around 1830, formerly enslaved throughout the South, probably was in Texas for the 1st Juneteenth. She was also the GGM of Harlem Renaissance’s Gwendolyn Bennett. @BWheeler_PhD pic.twitter.com/TiMWSJ40Xr
— GloriaDea (@GloriaDea) June 19, 2019
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