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#171 — Juneteenth Betweenth a Rock and a Hard Place

For Wednesday, Junteteenth, Day 171 of the Story-a-Day Challenge

By Gerard DiLeoPublished 12 days ago 2 min read

An unkown white WWI soldier was in Bell County, Texas, when an African American man joined him.

A second white man, in rags, waved. His head bandaged, he wore a moth-eaten blue coat with white trimmings indicating his artillery regiment.

"Where you from?" the African American man asked the ragged man.

"1776. General Washington's artillery."

"What's your name?" asked his white companion, his own uniform soiled and threadbare.

"Just some unknown," the Revolutionary War artilleryman said. "Forgotten. You?" he asked the WWI solder.

"Me, too,"

"Don't know my name, neither," confessed the black man. Seems I was long forgotten before gettin' hanged with six brethren by Klansmen, after bein' liberated in 1866. Emancipation didn't sit right with folks. June 19th made it official, but unofficial lynchings happened anyway. USA's a hard place, crammin' all different types together. Not talking 'bout black and white, but righteous and nefarious."

"But the grand experiment!" shouted the artilleryman. "All men--created equal."

"By when?" asked the black man. "Not everybody's in that all."

"When we surrounded the British army at Yorktown--1781--an' they surrendered."

"Really?" the black man said. "Hard for me to celebrate. Or even see anythin' special in Juneteenth, turns out."

"Gentlemen," the WWI man interrupted. "There's a bigger picture. In 1914 the whole world was threatened. This country, this "hard place" you say, joined in. It was one world against another, an' together we taught Germany a lesson."

"Haven't bothered us since," added the black man.

"True," he agreed. "But--in deference to you, sir," he said to him, "while free men are not always free, the general direction's rock solid. It's our rock. Even in a hard place like this. As a memorialized man, I refer you to Memorial Day."

"And Independence Day," the Revolutionary artilleryman said. "And Juneteenth betweenth them. And that's where we walk right now--between a rock and hard place.

"I'm not forgotten," said the Unknown Soldier. I have a tomb--put there in 1931."

"I guess that's somethin'," admitted the black man.

"You've got two holidays," complained the artilleryman to the black man.

"Holidays come and go." said the WWI soldier. The calendar should be filled with the likes of us."

Hardly enough, they each thought.

_________________

AUTHOR'S NOTES:

List of US lynchings: Juneteenth came and went; so did the post-emancipation lynchings. (Some didn't get the memo.) In 1866, after the June 19 emancipation of all slaves in Texas, the last state to have slavery, the Ku Klux Klan lynched seven black men in Bell County.

Through review of those 1865-1868 records, Congressional testimony, and newspaper reports from the era, the Equal Justice Initiative has documented more than 2,000 Black victims killed during the Reconstruction era, from 1865 to 1876. This is a staggering figure compared to the more than 4,400 victims documented for the 74-year era of racial terror lynching that spans 1877 to 1950. It is an even more horrific figure considering the thousands of additional victims who may be documented in other records, or who are undocumented and forever lost to history.

That is...UNKNOWN.

_______________

For Wednesday, June 19, Day 171 of the Story-a-Day Challenge

366 WORDS (without A/N)

Title-accompaniment photo was AI-generated (Artificial Integration) but the outrage was not.

---

There are currently three surviving Vocal writers still participating in the 2024 Story-a-Day Challenge:

• L.C. Schäfer, challenge originator

• Rachel Deeming

• Gerard DiLeo (some other guy)

Read them. Support them. Pray for them. And watch none of them wish you a "Happy Juneteenth," because...just because.

SeriesMicrofictionHistorical

About the Creator

Gerard DiLeo

Retired, not tired. In Life Phase II: Living and writing from a decommissioned church in Hull, MA. (Phase I was New Orleans and everything that entails. Hippocampus, behave!

https://www.amazon.com/Gerard-DiLeo/e/B00JE6LL2W/

[email protected]

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Comments (5)

  • Shirley Belk11 days ago

    You did an amazing job with this story! Bravo

  • This was truly heartbreaking and it'll stay with me long after I've left this comment.

  • Dawnxisoul393art12 days ago

    Your story prompts reflection. It's a thought-provoking and powerful narrative. Thank you for sharing this impactful piece.

  • John Cox12 days ago

    Amazing story soberly told however difficult it is to stay sober after reading it.

  • The history is depressing and it angers me. But I am also going to commemorate Juneteenth to remember and to honor any progress we have made whether it is a small step or a big step. Because we must remember and honor the progressions that we have made. All lives matter, but I want to say that black lives matter and I say this because the oppression and the killings still exist to this day. Excellent and throught-provoking article. Thank you for writing and sharing this Gerard.

Gerard DiLeoWritten by Gerard DiLeo

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