Connecticut Landmarks Juneteenth Event (original) (raw)
Connecticut Landmarks Juneteenth EventOlivia Grella2024-11-06T12:28:40-05:00
Save the date for the Hempsted Houses’ 2025 Juneteenth Celebration! This three-day long celebration will feature a campfire conversation, Sunday Service, living history presentations, children’s activities, live music, and more! To view details from our 2024 Juneteenth Celebration, scroll down or click here.
History in Celebration
Schedule of Events
We invite you to discover what’s happening during our Juneteenth Festival. Learn more about each event, special guests, and register for daily activities, too. Be sure to check back here for updates on activities and times!
Friday, June 7
Juneteenth Virtual Presentation (10 am)
Join Living Historians Joseph McGill of the Slave Dwelling Project and Tammy Denease of Hidden Women Productions as they commemorate Juneteenth in this special virtual presentation. Juneteenth celebrates the end of slavery in the United States, announced in 1865 by Union Soldiers in Galveston, Texas, with news that the Civil War had ended and the enslaved were now free.
Registration appreciated, but not required! This event will be held over Zoom. Registrants will receive a link via email to view the program the day of the event.
Campfire Conversation (5:30 pm – 7 pm)
Gather around the campfire for a community conversation to commemorate historic and present-day struggles toward freedom and hear more about the work of Joseph McGill of the Slave Dwelling Project and Tammy Denease of Hidden Women Productions.
REGISTRATION CLOSED: Sleepover at the New London County Historical Society Shaw Mansion ( 7:30 pm – 7:30 am)
UPDATE: Thank you for your interest in attending the Shaw Mansion Sleepover from June 7-June 8, 2024. Registration is now closed as we have reached capacity for this event. Those who filled out the event inquiry form will be contacted via the email address provided. Please visit slavedwellingproject.org to learn more about Joseph McGill’s work and discover other Slave Dwelling Project events.
Visitors will have the opportunity to meet Joseph McGill on Sunday, June 9 at the Phelps-Hatheway House in Suffield, where he will be signing copies of his most recent book, Sleeping with the Ancestors. The book will be available for purchase in the gift shop. Learn more about that event here.
Join Joseph McGill as well as staff from the Hempsted Houses and the Shaw Mansion as we continue the conversation about the truthful narrative of American history and the legacies of slavery.
The Shaw Mansion was built in 1756 for captain Nathaniel Shaw and was home to ten enslaved people. On his deathbed, Nathaniel Shaw Jr. emancipated all ten enslaved people in 1781. During the conversation, participants will learn about the lives of Caesar Shaw, Celia Shaw, James Tilley, and Prince who were four of the ten enslaved people on the property.
Saturday, June 8
Juneteenth Celebration Day (10:45 am – 4 pm)
Celebrate Juneteenth with music and dance performances, living history presentations, and children’s activities and crafts. Connecticut Landmarks and partners will highlight the African American history of the Hempsted Houses and the surrounding neighborhood with the City of New London.
Schedule of the day’s activities
10:45 am – Drumming led by Kenny “Doc” Frazier
11:15 am – Presentation of Colors – NLHS ROTC
11:30 am – Welcome – Curtis Goodwin
12:00 noon – NLHS Voices United
12:30 pm – Keynote Speaker – Lonnie Braxton
1:30 pm – Joan Jackson – Tammy Denease
2:00 pm – Book Reading – Carrie McWilliams
3:00 pm – Poetry Reading – Arnell Peck
Sunday, June 9
Sunday Services (11:30 am – 3 pm)
Pastor Michael Cagle leads participants in community for a spiritual and lively non-denominational church service followed by performances by The Jim Hunter Jazz Group and the New London Public Schools Bands.
The Frank Loomis Palmer Fund
The Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut
The Chelsea Groton Foundation, Inc.
Connecticut Explored, Inc.