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Still We Rise: A July-teenth Celebration

  • Woodland Plantation 1128 Louisiana 628 LaPlace, LA, 70068 United States (map)

Still We Rise: A July-teenth Celebration

Max 200 Visitors

9:30am: Shuttle Service Begins at Rising Star (620 Cardinal Street, Laplace, LA, United States, Louisiana)
(Shuttle on a 25 minute rotation throughout the day) 

  • 10:00am: Event and Museum Opens

  • 11:00am: Welcome/Speakers 

  • 11:45am: Yellow Pocahontas Black Masking Indians Performance 

  • 12:30pm: Porch Performance: Tara Alexander 

  • 1:45pm: Community Talk: Still We Rise 

    • Legacies of the historical struggle: connecting freedom and fenceline communities.

  • 3:00pm: Sister Sula 

  • 4:30pm: Event Ends 

If you rsvp for this event, you will get a free meal from one of 4 foodtrucks/vendors. Vendors will also be selling their meals at normal cost.

If you bring a reusable bottle/cup you will receive a free screen printed art poster of the event!

July-teenth? Don’t you mean June-teenth?

Enslaved people in St. John the Baptist Parish were not legally emancipated until July of 1864—more than a year and a half after the Emancipation Proclamation- when Louisiana officially abolished slavery. While most communities across the United States commemorate Juneteenth as a symbol of freedom, Julyteenth will be The Descendants Project’s annual program at Woodland Plantation that honors those who were excluded from emancipation by the U.S. government. This event will uplift those who sought and continue to fight for freedom in St. John the Baptist Parish. 

Why July instead of June?

The Descendants Project and Woodland Plantation are located in St. John the Baptist Parish, one of 13 Louisiana parishes that were exempt from the Emancipation Proclamation when it was issued on January 1, 1863. At that time, these areas were under Union control, and President Abraham Lincoln chose to exclude them in hopes of encouraging loyalty to the Union and expediting Louisiana's readmission into the United States. As a result, enslaved people in these parishes remained in bondage even as others across the South were declared free.

Louisiana officially abolished slavery in July of 1864, under a new state constitution. However, this legal end to slavery did not bring full freedom. Formerly enslaved people were denied civil rights, subjected to exploitative labor systems, and targeted by laws designed to control Black life and labor. The legacy of this delayed and conditional emancipation persists today, most visibly through mass incarceration but also through the plantation to petrochemical throughline. Holding our program in July acknowledges those whose liberation was delayed, contested, and redefined, and uplifts ongoing struggles for justice and true freedom.

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July 17

The stories we carry: Harriet Tubman’s Legacy of Liberation