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The Ten News, News For Curious Kids

Celebrating Juneteenth! (Re-air)

The Ten News, News For Curious Kids

Small But Mighty Media

Education For Kids, Kids & Family, News

4.4702 Ratings

🗓️ 19 June 2025

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Going into the vault for this episode from Season 2! In today's episode: 🤔 How is a 156-year-old holiday only officially turning 2 years old? 🔎 Show host Bethany Van Delft is here to break it down. ✊ Correspondent Pamela Kirkland is back with an update on the activist who successfully fought to make Juneteenth a national holiday, Miss Opal Lee. ✔️ Fun Fact Check: how many flags does Juneteenth have and what do they symbolize? And, test your federal holiday knowledge on today's Trivia on the Ten. ✅

Transcript

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0:00.0

Parades across the United States have commemorated Juneteenth.

0:05.0

The Juneteenth holiday commemorates the end of slavery in the United States and the celebrations now take place all over the country.

0:12.0

Do we have a lot more to do? Oh yeah. Are we where we're supposed to be? Not yet.

0:18.0

How is a 156 year old holiday only officially turning two years old? Today we're looking ahead to June 10th. I'm Bethany Van Delft. It's Thursday, June 16th, and this is the 10 News.

0:36.7

For descendants of 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

0:40.1

For descendants of enslaved Africans living in the U.S., Juneteenth is both a somber day and a celebration.

0:47.6

The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 freed all enslaved people in the United States, but

0:54.1

the Civil War was still happening.

0:56.0

That meant people living in Confederate states, including enslaved black people, were still subject to Confederate laws.

1:03.0

So even though the laws said enslaved people were free, in reality they were not.

1:08.0

What?

1:09.0

Then when the war ended in April of 1865, inslavers didn't want to lose the free labor and power

1:15.9

they had, so they simply didn't tell the people they enslaved about the emancipation

1:21.2

proclamation.

1:22.2

Are you kidding me?

1:23.5

Of course, there were no phones or internet, so news only traveled by word or mouth, and the

1:28.4

news hadn't reached Texas yet. But finally, on June 19, 1865, two years after the law was passed,

1:36.4

and two months after the war ended, the 250,000 enslaved people in Texas learned the truth,

1:43.1

that they were free yes one year later

1:46.8

june 19th or june teenth became an unofficial holiday for the newly free black community in

1:52.8

texas in the 156 years since the first june tenth the holidays spread across the country mainly

1:59.7

celebrated in black communities but finally was signed into federal law as a holiday in 2021.

...

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