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Tmitsss's avatar

I would replace Juneteenth with May 13th. Roberts Smalls was born a slave in 1839. At age 14, His master hired him out to the owner of the steamship Planter in Charleston Harbor. In the early morning hours of May 13, 1862, Smalls (aged 22) using the skills he learned, freed himself, his family, his crew, their families and 4 Confederate harbor defense cannons by commandeering the ship, and sailing it from the Confederate-controlled waters past Fort Sumter to the U.S. blockade that surrounded the harbor. He was later elected to the United States Congress as a Republican. Taking charge of your own fate should be celebrated. Tip of the Day. If you own the fastest vehicle around, don’t leave the keys where the kids can find them. (Note: It wasn’t speed that got them past the fort’s cannons)

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Wally Firkins's avatar

Thank you Tara. It is difficult for me to imagine what June 19th and the Emancipation Proclamation must have meant to the slaves of Galveston what slavery must have been like for the slaves of the United States. However, I am hopeful that this nation will eventually heal from the terrible institution of slavery.

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