MICHIGAN SENATE
Offered by Senators Bullock, Ananich, Bayer, Bizon, Brinks, Bumstead, Chang, Geiss, Hertel, Horn, Huizenga, Irwin, Johnson, LaSata, MacDonald, McBroom, McCann, McMorrow,
Moss, Nesbitt, Outman, Polehanki, Santana, Schmidt, Shirkey, Stamas, VanderWall, Victory, Wojno and Zorn
A RESOLUTION TO COMMEMORATE JUNE 19, 2022, AS JUNETEENTH
WHEREAS, The transatlantic slave trade system established both Europe and North America as world powers by and through the commoditization of Africans. Millions of Africans suffered disease and death on the eight week voyages across the Middle Passage; and
WHEREAS, From 1619 through 1865, millions of Africans and their descendants were enslaved in the United States, the thirteen American colonies, and eventually the United States of America; and
WHEREAS, Maritime, agricultural, insurance, defense, tobacco, sugar, and cotton industries were established off of profits from the atrocities of slavery; and
WHEREAS, Slavery highlights the fundamental hypocrisy and moral contradiction of European whites in America who declared independent rights from Great Britain, while holding in bondage more than 100,000 Africans; and
WHEREAS, Michigan served as the major hub of the Underground Railroad and home to several white abolitionists, including United States Representative and Senator Jacob Merritt Howard, Guy Beckley of Ann Arbor, Erastus Hussey of Battle Creek, and Seymour Finney of Detroit; and
WHEREAS, Through the work of these great men of all colors, the Second Baptist Church of Detroit, Friends of the Fugitives, Anti-Slavery Society, and other institutions, thousands of slaves were freed; and
WHEREAS, On June 19, 1865, Texas was the last state to recognize that enslaved persons were free, two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed by President Abraham Lincoln. For this reason, it is celebrated as Juneteenth; and
WHEREAS, Slavery was abolished with the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution on December 6, 1865; and
WHEREAS, After the emancipation from 247 years of slavery, Africans in America continue to experience the vestiges of slavery from challenges with voting rights, to inadequate public education systems, lack of access to capital lending institutions, police brutality, and other social and economic injustices; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED BY THE SENATE, That the members of this legislative body commemorate June 19, 2022, as Juneteenth; and be it further
RESOLVED, That we recognize the devastating legacy of American slavery, and encourage all citizens of Michigan to educate each other and future generations on the history of slavery in order to ensure that this tragedy will never be forgotten or repeated.
Adopted by the Senate, June 16, 2022.
Secretary of the Senate