![]() ![]() Joining her parents in a community celebration of Juneteenth, Cassie learns about the day when slaves in Texas were freed some two years after the Emancipation Proclamation and wonders why the news took so long to reach them. Readers of all ages will delight in this declaration of freedom and homecoming. Carole Boston Weatherford, Yvonne Buchanan (Illustrator) 3.98. With text and illustrations as warm as a summer day, author Carole Boston Weatherford and artist Yvonne Buchanan bring the African American emancipation celebration of Juneteenth to life for children. And, in the process, she realizes that she and her family have indeed come home. she experiences Juneteenth, a Texas tradition celebrating the end of slavery. It isn't until Cassie and her family arrive downtown that she discovers what the commotion is about. Juneteenth jamboree / by Carole Boston Weatherford illustrated by Yvonne. As she helps prepare red velvet cake, fried chicken, and piles of other dishes, she wonders what makes June 19th so important. ![]() What Cassie doesn't know is that her family has a surprise for her - a Texas tradition. Cassie likes her new house, and her new school is okay, but Texas doesn't quite feel like home yet. Cassandra's family has just moved from the city back to her parents' hometown in Texas. A young girl, who has just moved to her parents' hometown, realizes that she has come home after the African American emancipation celebration of Juneteenth. ![]()
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