AUDIO SLIDESHOW: Juneteenth celebration

Meadville Tribune

June 19, 2008 09:47 pm

Click image for slideshow



By Ryan Smith
MEADVILLE TRIBUNE
Juneteenth marks a day to remember.
It’s also a day to celebrate the future, and to educate younger generations about the past sacrifices that led to the June day in 1865 when the last slaves were freed in the United States.
“We try to let them know the freedom they have now wasn’t free,” said Denise Jones, treasurer for the Meadville chapter of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) and an organizer of Thursday’s Juneteenth Community Picnic Celebration at Diamond Park. “They need to understand their past in order to thoroughly enjoy their futures.”
To get that message across, the NAACP hosted this year’s June 19 celebration — “Freedom Rings: Remembering the Past, Celebrating the Future” — at an easily-accessible central location and included historical interpreters, cultural and educational presentations, music, artifacts, picnic food, games and more.
“The celebration is for everyone who values freedom and unity,” chapter President Sam Byrd said recently. “Residents of this area are the heirs of a proud American legacy, and we hope for a good turnout to publicly celebrate our unity as sisters and brothers in one nation under God.”
Events included the Harry T. Burleigh Society hosting historic interpreters Adrianne Rush, who portrayed Burleigh’s mother, Elizabeth Waters; and Johnny Johnson, who portrayed Waters’ father and Underground Railroad conductor Hamilton Waters.
An Erie native, Burleigh was a world-renowned composer famous for his arrangements of African-American spirituals.
Charles Kennedy Jr., a rostered artist with the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, presented “The Quiet Heroes of the Underground Railroad,” which included a soulful rendition of the spiritual “Keep Your Hands on the Plow.”
“Each of us was put here for a reason,” he told the crowd. “When you find out what you’re supposed to be doing with your life, you just keep your hands on that plow and you’ll be fine.”
Kennedy also presented a tribute to Nat King Cole, sharing stories about the singer and some of the songs he made famous.
Other local entertainment included an American Shotokan karate exhibition with Master Arnold Johnson III, a drum circle, poetry by Dianne Manning and acoustic blues renditions by Rodger Montgomery. Cultural and educational artifacts, as well as materials from the John Brown Museum, were also on display.
Last year, Crawford County commissioners and City of Meadville officials joined communities throughout the United States in proclaiming June 19 to be Juneteenth Day.

Ryan Smith can be reached at 724-6370 or by e-mail at rsmith@meadvilletribune.com.

Did you know?
A Union general delivered news to Galveston, Texas, that the Civil War had ended and the enslaved were to be freed on June 19, 1865. That announcement came more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Emancipation Proclamation.

Get involved
The Meadville chapter of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) meets the first Saturday of every month at United Faith Fellowship Church of God, 561 State St. All meetings are open to the public.
For more information about getting involved in the NAACP, call local chapter President Sam Byrd at 337-7233 or secretary Melissa Burnett at 547-5136.

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Photos


Johnny Johnson with Historic Interpreters from Erie portrays a former slave who gained his freedom at the Meadville NAACP annual Juneteenth Celebration held in the Diamond Park. JIM STEFANUCCI/Meadville Tribune