South County Regional Library will have a delayed opening at 1pm today due to a power outage. 

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Commemoration of Emancipation by African Americans in North Carolina, 1865-1920

June 16, 2023

 

Before there was Juneteenth, there was Emancipation Day: January 1st, 1863, the day the Emancipation Proclamation went into effect. The only public celebrations on the first Emancipation Day took place in Northern cities, where persons in flight from slavery gathered to watch for midnight on New Year’s Eve, 1862. With the coming of January 1st, the terms of the Emancipation Proclamation came into effect, and escaped slaves would be delivered from the threat of arrest and transportation to a slave state. The Proclamation stripped slave-owners in rebel states, at least, of the right to reclaim fugitives as stolen property.  

 

"Waiting for the Hour"<br />
About twenty escaped slaves crowd around a pulpit. On the wall is a clock to show when midnight of the New Year will arrive. The Emancipation Proclamation went into effect on Jan. 1, 1863

 

On the second anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation – January 1, 1865 – the Civil War was still being fought and Abraham Lincoln was alive and well in the White House. Black people in North Carolina knew better than to celebrate a Proclamation by the Commander in Chief of the opposing side, but New Bern, NC, offered different circumstances. Federal forces occupied the town and they – the Union soldiers – organized and oversaw a celebration of the anniversary that included local freedmen.   

 

The first peacetime celebration of emancipation in North Carolina that was led by the freedmen themselves took place in Wilmington in January of 1866. 

 

The previous month had seen two momentous changes regarding slavery and the law. On December 5th, 1865, the thirteenth amendment had been ratified by enough states to be added to the Constitution of the United States. It made the abolition of slavery permanent throughout the nation. Three weeks later, the voters of North Carolina added an amendment to the state constitution abolishing slavery in the state. These actions closed the door to the possibility of undoing the Emancipation Proclamation, either at the federal or the state level. 

 

On Emancipation Day, 1866, freedmen and freedwomen got their first chance to express their relief at the end of the war and their hope for building new lives after enslavement. 

 

“We understand that a grand celebration by the colored population is to take place on the first of January,” said an editorial in the Wilmington Herald. Indeed, it was. When Emancipation Day came, the Black community of Wilmington turned out, and people from the surrounding rural areas came in to join them. 

 

The rejoicing crowd staged a procession through the streets. They were led by a band and carried banners to show what they believed in: “The Emancipation Proclamation: This We Celebrate,” “Abraham Lincoln, Our Martyred President,” “and “Equal Justice.” This last one expressed the marchers’ demand for recognition of themselves as full citizens of the United States. The 14th Amendment would promise just that, and Congress enacted it later that year. 

 

The Wilmington celebration was built on the model that was pioneered in New Bern and adopted by Black communities in other North Carolina cities: a parade led by a band, an excited crowd of all ages, and speeches. These elements of the celebration would appear every year in towns throughout the state. Enthusiasm for the celebration of Emancipation Day did not wane until the 1920s. By then, according to A History of African Americans in North Carolina by Jeffrey Crow, “younger Blacks began to question the continued commemoration of Emancipation Day. 

 

In Texas, however, the local holiday of “Juneteenth” persisted. It kept alive the idea of a day to celebrate emancipation and became a national holiday in 2021.

 

- Written by Tom Cole, Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room

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2025 Book Sale Dates

January 21, 2025

This blog was written by Kim Arlia, logistics leader for Charlotte Mecklenburg Library.

This blog was updated on August 1, 2025 to include new dates and remove dates that have already passed.

 

BACK TO SCHOOL!!  It is almost here.  Are you ready to get back into the swing of things?  Early mornings, carpooling, buses, the big lunch decisions, and what to wear!!  Oh, we got spoiled over the summer just sitting back and reading to our hearts content.  It does not have to stop!  We have everything you need to continue that summer feeling as we get ready for school and fall weather.
The next three book sales will be loaded with books for those aged 0 to 18.  School is tough  - so why not stack up on pleasure reading for everyone.  We are doubling the number of children’s books being offered at the next three book sales!  Oh – we are going to be at the South End Market Saturday, August 23.  If you are up early you can see me at the South End Market, purchase some great titles and then head to the Pineville Library Community Book Sale for even more great deals!!  I always loved back to school deals!!



"Education is the passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today."
— Malcolm X.
 


Support your local library and expand your mind.  See you at the sales!
 

 

Start marking your calendar today!  Book sales are 9 a.m. – 1 pm (unless otherwise noted).

 

  • Saturday, August 23, 2025 – Pineville Library
    • Extra children’s books will be available
  • Saturday, August 23, 2025 – South End Market (8 a.m. – 1 p.m.) Located on the rail trail parallel to South Boulevard extending to Tremont Avenue
  • Saturday, September 13, 2025 –Hickory Grove Library
    • Extra children’s books will be available
  • Saturday, September 20, 2025 – Mountain Island Library
    • Extra children’s books will be available
  • Saturday, October 25, 2025 – Myers Park Library
  • Saturday, November 15, 2025 – Mint Hill Library
  • Saturday, November 22, 2025 – West Blvd. Library
  • Saturday, December 6, 2025 – North County Regional Library
  • Saturday, December 13, 2025 – South County Regional Library

 

As new dates are scheduled – the listing will be updated.  Hope to see you soon!!

 

“Books are a uniquely portable magic.” — Stephen King

 

HOW CAN I DONATE BOOKS?

Book donations are currently accepted at all open Library locations. You can drop off a box/bag per day. The back rooms of our libraries are small so we cannot accept large donations at branches. Please call your local Library before making a book donation to ensure the location can receive your items. Do not leave them outside – rain and bugs are not their friends!  

 

The Library does NOT accept the following items:

  1. Newspapers
  2. Magazines
  3. Encyclopedias
  4. VHS tapes
  5. Music CDs
  6. DVDs
  7. Albums

 

The library does accept textbooks, travel guides, and computer books – but they have to be published between 2022 and 2025

 

Have a large donation? Please contact Kim Arlia at [email protected] or Maurice Huntley at [email protected] for directions for the Library Administration Center (LAC).  The LAC operating hours for donations are Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 2 p.m.

 

WHAT HAPPENS TO DONATIONS?

All donations are brought via the library delivery system to the Library Administration Center (LAC).  At the LAC, a team of volunteers will go through the donations and determine what will happen to them based on condition, age, and genre.  Some may be added to the existing library collection, others may go to various outreach programs, some make their way to the many Free Little Libraries in Mecklenburg County, while others end up at the library book sale or for sale at Thriftbooks.com.  Revenue generated by book sales and Thinftbooks.com allows for the procurement of more library materials.