Two years after the Emancipation Proclamation had been issued and two months after the official end of the Civil War, Union General Gordon Granger and several thousand federal troops reached Galveston, Texas, a Confederate holdout. Granger pronounced to African Americans still enslaved there: “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.”
And as Black people who’d earlier freed themselves by walking away from plantations to join Union lines as slavery crumbled during the war or who’d heard the news immediately after the war had done, African Americans in Texas “put their feet in the road” to find family.
Their first priority—despite widespread violence and new laws intended to stop them—was to reunite their families and to protect them under new civil rights.
Newly freed bondwomen and men moved. They moved to feel the freedom of having control over their own bodies and to find the souls who’d been sold away from them. They moved to get their children back, their mothers and fathers back, and their wives and husbands back.
To them, freedom meant family first.