Showing posts with label Washington D.C.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington D.C.. Show all posts

April 16 - Emancipation Day in Washington, D.C.

  Posted on April 16, 2022

This is an update of my post published on April 16, 2011:





Free at last! On this date in 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Compensated Emancipation Act, freeing thousands of enslaved persons in the District of Columbia and paying the slave owners around $300 per freed person. Of course, the act also made slavery illegal in the U.S. capital.

April 16 is a legal holiday in Washington, D.C., although events commemorating the Emancipation Act are generally held on convenient days during mid-April, rather than the 16th itself. This year the 16th is a Saturday, a great day for a celebration! 

Nine months after signing the Compensated Emancipation Act into law, Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He thus made slavery illegal everywhere in the U.S. and freed all enslaved persons.

However, as you may recall, the nation was torn apart at that point, and the southern states, being in rebellion against the U.S. and having set up their own country, didn't follow the dictates of Washington, D.C.! It took time for enslaved people to even hear about the Emancipation Proclamation, and I bet that, when some people heard rumors that they had been declared free, they hardly dared to believe those rumors. Because of the lag between the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation and the news of such, let alone actual freedom, emancipation is celebrated on various days from March through July in states and territories including Florida, Mississippi, Texas, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.

Find out more...

Check out the stories of people who remembered slavery—stories of extraordinary “ordinary” people who survived the horrors of human bondage and expressed what it was like to be “a slave no more.” 

Here are some audio stories.

Teens will appreciate The 1619 Project.








Record Store Day
(Third Saturday of April)





Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for:

April 14, 2012 - National Cherry Blossom Parade and Festival




– U.S.

More than 100,000 spectators from around the world will flock to Washington, D.C., today to see the cherry blossom parade and to have fun at the Sakura Matsuri Japanese Street Festival.

The parade will be awesome! There will be decorated floats and gigantic helium balloons (think Rose Parade meets Macy's Thanksgiving Parade). There will be marching bands, clowns, horses, and antique cars, like a lot of parades—but there will be celebrities, too, including an American Idol finalist, singer Marie Osmond, and Olympic skater Kristi Yamaguchi. Singers will sing, dancers will dance, and cultural groups will perform.

The street festival will be the biggest Japanese street party in the nation, with three stages for Japanese performances and more than 200 martial artists showing off their skills. There will be a wide variety of Japanese and Asian restaurant booths, cultural exhibits, and vendors. Anywhere you can see ninja and samurai while eating sushi and tempura is great, as far as I'm concerned!

Create cherry blossom art.

I used to love this project when I was a kid. Get India ink, white and red paint (tempura or acrylic), a sponge, drinking straws, and white paper. Use the dropper from the ink bottle to squeeze a large drop of ink onto the paper near one of the bottom corners. Quickly raise the straw to your lips, place the other end to one side of the ink drop, and blow the ink across the paper. Usually the stream of India ink will naturally branch off; reorient your straw and continue to blow each branch until the ink is dry. You can add more (smaller) drops of ink, as needed, in order to make a pleasing picture of a cherry tree branch.

Allow the India ink branch picture to dry.

Put some red and white paint onto a palette (or sturdy paper plate), and use the sponge to mix some of the paint into a pleasing pink color. It's nice to leave some of the white and red unmixed so that there is a variation in the color of the cherry blossoms. Dab a corner of the sponge into pink, red, and white paint and then dab cherry-blossom splotches onto the India-ink branches.

Also on this date: