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Conference On Texas – Ode to Juneteenth: Slavery in Texas

History Multi-Cultural Conference

What’s Happening?

The 2024 Conference on Texas at the Witte Museum will reveal the foundational role of chattel slavery in the formation and growth of Texas. The conference will center on the lives of the enslaved people, especially as mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers. Every facet of the expanding Texas economy was impacted by slavery and enslaved labor. Enslaved people not only labored on cotton and sugar plantations, they also worked as artisans such as blacksmiths, seamstresses, and as enslaved cowboys.

In 1834, there were approximately 5,000 enslaved people in Mexican Texas. During the Republic of Texas, slavery increased so that by 1845, there were at least 30,000 enslaved women, men, and children in the new state of Texas. When Texas voted to join the Confederacy in 1861, the enslaved population was 182,566 people, the fastest growing demographic in Texas. The economy of Texas was so dependent upon slavery that not until June 19, 1865, now celebrated as Juneteenth, were enslaved people freed from bondage in Texas, two years after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

Through new scholarship, the Conference will broaden the understanding of the ongoing legacies from slavery which continue to impact African Americans in Texas.

Learn more about this year’s conference here.

The National Conversation on Race: San Antonio program is a collaboration among the Asian Texans for Justice, American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions (AIT-SCM), the DoSeum, Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, San Antonio African American Community Archive Museum (SAAACAM), the Witte Museum, and the Smithsonian’s Our Shared Future: Reckoning with Our Racial Past.

The 2024 Conference on Texas at the Witte Museum will reveal the foundational role of chattel slavery in the formation and growth of Texas. The conference will center on the lives of the enslaved people, especially as mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers. Every facet of the expanding Texas economy was impacted by slavery and enslaved labor. Enslaved people not only labored on cotton and sugar plantations, they also worked as artisans such as blacksmiths, seamstresses, and as enslaved cowboys.

In 1834, there were approximately 5,000 enslaved people in Mexican Texas. During the Republic of Texas, slavery increased so that by 1845, there were at least 30,000 enslaved women, men, and children in the new state of Texas. When Texas voted to join the Confederacy in 1861, the enslaved population was 182,566 people, the fastest growing demographic in Texas. The economy of Texas was so dependent upon slavery that not until June 19, 1865, now celebrated as Juneteenth, were enslaved people freed from bondage in Texas, two years after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

Through new scholarship, the Conference will broaden the understanding of the ongoing legacies from slavery which continue to impact African Americans in Texas.

Learn more about this year’s conference here.

The National Conversation on Race: San Antonio program is a collaboration among the Asian Texans for Justice, American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions (AIT-SCM), the DoSeum, Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, San Antonio African American Community Archive Museum (SAAACAM), the Witte Museum, and the Smithsonian’s Our Shared Future: Reckoning with Our Racial Past.

More about San Antonio African American Community Archive and Museum
SAAACAM is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization formed to collect, maintain, disseminate and interpret authentic African American artifacts related to San Antonio history in a community-based digital archive. The organization’s goal is to illuminate San Antonio’s Black history by empowering individuals to curate their own archives and cultivate a community-driven museum of digitized and audiovisual exhibits. The development of the community archive is ongoing. SAAACAM is the proactive steward of cultural and physical preservation of historic African American resources.
When & Where
Multiple Dates
  • Dec 5, 2024, 8:00am to 5:00pm Timezone: CST
  • Dec 6, 2024, 8:00am to 5:00pm Timezone: CST
$35.00


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