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Tracing one family’s roots back to the first Juneteenth

(Photos top left-clockwise): George Ross Sr.; Vina Ross was a devout wife and mother; George Ross Jr., a previous publisher of the Denver Star; and the application Vina Ross created in order to get her husband George’s military pension. It shows the “colored” regiment that he served in. (Courtesy Photos)

AFRO – President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. Two years later on June 19, 1865 word finally got to enslaved Texans in Galveston that they had been free for over two years. Further west lived McMillan’s great grandmother, Vina Ross, née Elliot. She was born a “bound person” to a Quaker family in Kentucky which later migrated to Las Vegas, New Mexico. It’s highly likely that her freedom was delayed as well as those in Texas. She was born in 1853.

The post Tracing one family’s roots back to the first Juneteenth first appeared on BlackPressUSA.

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