On June 19, 1865, a Union general stood in Galveston, Texas, and read aloud an order that most of the country had been living with for two and a half years. The Civil War was over. The Confederacy had surrendered. And enslaved people in Texas, among the last to hear it, were finally told they were free. That day became known as Juneteenth, and for more than 150 years, it was commemorated largely without legal recognition. In 2021, it became a federal holiday.
The distance between those two moments is not just time. It is a legal story, one of proclamations that preceded their own enforcement, amendments ratified under duress, and a century of grassroots persistence before the federal government caught up with what Black Americans had been marking all along. Here is how that journey unfolded, step by step.
President Abraham Lincoln, one of more than two dozen lawyer-presidents to occupy the White House, issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, declaring that all enslaved people in Confederate states in rebellion against the Union were "forever free." It was a sweeping declaration, and also a carefully limited one. The Proclamation did not apply to border states that had remained in the Union, nor to Confederate areas already under Union control. It was grounded not in a moral argument alone, but in Lincoln's war powers as commander-in-chief, which meant its legal durability beyond the war was uncertain from the start. It freed people in places where the federal government had no immediate power to enforce it, and left the broader legal question of slavery's future unresolved.
Two and a half years after the Proclamation, Union General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, with federal troops and read aloud General Order No. 3, informing enslaved Texans that they were free and that the relationship between former enslavers and the newly freed was now "that of employer and free laborer." Texas had been largely insulated from Union forces throughout the war, which is why the news arrived so late. The order had no independent legal force of its own; it was an enforcement mechanism for what had already been declared, but June 19th became the date that freedom was actually delivered in one of the last holdout states. That is the date Juneteenth commemorates. It is worth remembering that the nation doing the delivering was the same one whose founders had enshrined property rights, including the ownership of human beings, into its earliest legal framework.
The Emancipation Proclamation's legal fragility was not lost on the Lincoln administration. What was needed was a constitutional amendment that would abolish slavery permanently and comprehensively, without exception. The 13th Amendment, ratified on December 6, 1865, did exactly that: "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States." Critically, it also gave Congress the power to enforce the amendment through legislation, laying the groundwork for the Reconstruction Acts that followed. For the first time, the abolition of slavery had constitutional force behind it.
Before the 14th Amendment existed, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the first federal statute to define citizenship and assert that all persons born in the United States were citizens entitled to equal protection under the law, regardless of race. President Andrew Johnson vetoed it on the grounds that it was unconstitutional and an overreach of federal power. Congress overrode the veto, marking the first time in American history that a major piece of civil rights legislation passed over a presidential veto. The Act was a direct precursor to the 14th Amendment, and many of its provisions were later absorbed into it.
Ratified in 1868, the 14th Amendment addressed what the 13th Amendment had left open: citizenship, equal protection, and due process. Its first section established birthright citizenship and guaranteed that no state could deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or deny equal protection of the laws. It was ratified under contested circumstances, with several Southern states required to ratify it as a condition of readmission to the Union, a legal and political pressure campaign that opponents argued undermined the legitimacy of the process. Regardless, the 14th Amendment became one of the most consequential provisions in American constitutional law, reshaping the interpretation of other constitutional guarantees, including the Sixth Amendment, for generations of litigation that followed.
The decade following the Civil War saw dramatic legal progress: Black men gained the right to vote under the 15th Amendment (1870), Black Americans were elected to Congress, and federal troops in the South provided some measure of enforcement for the new constitutional order. Then came the Compromise of 1877, which effectively ended Reconstruction by withdrawing federal troops from the South. What followed was a systematic legal dismantling of the gains made during Reconstruction, including the Supreme Court's 1883 ruling striking down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, and eventually the Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896, which established the "separate but equal" doctrine and provided constitutional cover for Jim Crow laws for the next six decades. The long fight to overturn that doctrine would fall to the Black legal pioneers who spent the better part of the 20th century dismantling it from within the system.
Through all of it, Juneteenth continued to be observed. Black communities across Texas and eventually across the country marked June 19th with readings, prayer, music, and gatherings, keeping the date alive without any official recognition. As Black Americans migrated north and west during the Great Migration, they brought the tradition with them. Texas became the first state to make Juneteenth a state holiday in 1980. By the early 21st century, the majority of states recognized it in some form. The holiday endured not because the law protected it, but in spite of the fact that for most of its history, it did not.
On June 17, 2021, President Biden signed the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act into law, making June 19th a federal public holiday. The bill passed the Senate unanimously and the House with only 14 dissenting votes. It was the first new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was established in 1983. The law did not create Juneteenth's significance. It recognized what had been true in Black American communities for more than 150 years: that June 19, 1865 was a date worth marking, year after year, regardless of whether the government agreed.
Juneteenth is often discussed as a cultural holiday, and it is. But it is also a legal one. Its origin is an order issued by a military general. Its foundation is a constitutional amendment. Its path to recognition required acts of Congress, presidential signatures, and state-by-state legislative action stretching across more than a century. The gap between the Emancipation Proclamation and General Order No. 3, between the 13th Amendment and the dismantling of Reconstruction, between Plessy and Brown, between the first Juneteenth and federal recognition of it, is a gap measured in legal failures and legal fights. Understanding that history is part of understanding American law.
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