Juneteenth Celebration
Object Details
- Creator
- Anacostia Museum
- Anacostia Community Museum
- Scope and Contents
- On June 22, 1991, the Anacostia Museum and Center for African American History and Culture's Juneteenth Celebration was held at the Anacostia Museum. Mayor Sharon Pratt Dixon and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton greeted guests with remarks. Musical and dance performances included West African dance troupe Kan Kouran; bell ringers The Templeton Chimers; a capella group In Process; go-go band Junkyard Band; blues band Sonny Forriest; doo-wop singers The Orioles; Afro-pop group Liziba; St. Teresa of Avila Young Adult Choir; and jazz duo Yvonne and Phyllis. Arts and crafts demonstrations included hair braiding, kente weaving, wood carving, cartooning, wool spinning by Mirma Jones, and quilting by Daughter of Dorcas. The day also included games for children, Myklar the Magician, the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Reenactment Group, and screenings of 'Roots of Resistance: A Story of the Underground Railroad' and 'Gift of the Black Folk.' The theme for the Juneteenth Celebration 1991 was Freedom Revisited.
- Celebration - festival. Part of Juneteenth Programs. Dated 1991.
- Date
- 1991
- Extent
- 1 Video recording (VHS, 1/2")
- Type
- Archival materials
- Video recordings
- Topic
- African Americans
- Juneteenth
- Celebrations
- Museums and community
- Place
- Anacostia (Washington, D.C.)
- United States
- Citation
- Juneteenth Program Records 1989-1998, Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Smithsonian Institution.
- Identifier
- ACMA.01-007.13, Item ACMA AV002093
Related Content
1 result(s)-
Juneteenth Program Records, 1989-1998
- Scope and Contents
- This collection consists of the records of Anacostia Community Museum's Juneteenth program held by the museum from 1989-1999. The material consists primarily of event programs, photographs, and audiovisual recordings of the various celebrations held on the grounds of the museum. video and audio recordings of the program events.
- Biographical / Historical
- Juneteenth is the celebration of the emancipation of Texas slaves, who were formally notified of their freedom on June 19, 1865. Although Congress abolished slavery in the District of Columbia in April and the territories in June of 1862, it took over two years for the news to reach Texas. The celebration of freedom demonstrates the richness of African American culture and a strong spirit of community. Since 1865, Juneteenth has been celebrated in communities throughout the country with a variety of activities, including picnics, parades, music, speeches, dancing, rodeos and baseball. In 1989, the Anacostia Museum began hosting a Juneteenth celebration, which typically included speeches, musical and dance performances, children's activities, and arts and crafts demonstrations.
- Date
- 1989-1998
- Extent
- 936 Photographs (1 Binder, 35mm slides, negatives, and photographic prints.)
- 0.5 Linear feet
- 10 Video recordings (VHS, 1/2" )
- 1 Sound recording (audio cassette)
- Citation
- Juneteenth Program Records, 1989-1998, Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Smithsonian Institution.
- Type
- Collection descriptions
- Archival materials
- Photographs
- Video recordings
- Sound recordings
- Slides (photographs)
- Topic
- Juneteenth
- Public Programs
- Celebrations
- Sound recordings
- Place
- Anacostia (Washington, D.C.)
- Identifier
- ACMA.01-007.13