Alexandria Noir

Juneteenth in Alexandria 2026: Freedom’s History and Citywide Celebration

Alexandria Black History Museum
The Alexandria Black History Museum includes the Museum, the Watson Reading Room, and the Alexandria African American Heritage Park. Other African American historic sites in Alexandria include the Freedom House Museum, the Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial, and sites along the African American Heritage Trail. Photo: Alexandriava.gov

Alexandria, VA – Juneteenth is one of those dates that asks us to do two things at once: celebrate freedom and remember how long freedom was delayed.

The holiday marks June 19, 1865, when Union Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and announced that enslaved people there were free. That was more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. Texans began celebrating Juneteenth in 1866, and in 2021 it became a federal holiday.

ALex Gazette clipping

But here in Alexandria, the story is even closer to home. Our city’s Black history is not tucked away in one building or one marker. It lives in Old Town streets, churches, schools, museums, the waterfront and neighborhoods whose stories are still being recovered and retold.

The City of Alexandria notes that local emancipation observances began as early as 1889. Frederick Douglass was keynote speaker at an Alexandria emancipation anniversary event in 1894. John Mercer Langston spoke at later celebrations in 1895 and 1897. For nearly 30 years, the Alexandria Black History Museum has helped keep Juneteenth alive locally with festivals, performances, children’s activities, vendors and readings of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Frederick Douglas Graphic

That is why this holiday means so much here. John Taylor Chapman, founder of Manumission Tour Company and an Alexandria City Council member, has said the work is about telling stories many Alexandrians were never taught. “I did not feel that I knew some of the stories that I’m telling now when I was growing up,” Chapman told ALXnow in 2020. In a tour covered by The Zebra, he also pointed to “a real lack of telling the history of African Americans” in Alexandria’s public story.

Audrey Davis, longtime leader of the Alexandria Black History Museum and director of the city’s African American History Division, has described Juneteenth as a call to “Celebrate. Educate. Agitate.” She told Visit Alexandria, “African Americans helped to build Alexandria, helped to build this nation, and their history needs to be on par with everyone else’s.”

This year, Alexandria will mark Juneteenth with music, storytelling, art, history and community gathering. It is a day to bring the family, support local culture, and remember that freedom’s story belongs not only to the past, but to the way we tell the truth today.

At press time, these were the posted details. Schedules can change, so readers should scan the QR code in this article and check the City of Alexandria’s Juneteenth page and official event calendar before attending.

Juneteenth logo

WHERE TO CELEBRATE JUNETEENTH IN ALEXANDRIA

  • Jubilee Voices Concert
    Friday, June 19, 2026, 1–3 p.m.
    Shiloh Baptist Church Worship Center, 1401 Jamieson Avenue
    Free concert with spirituals, poetry, ring shouts, banjo tunes, stories and audience participation.
  • City Juneteenth Celebration
    Friday, June 19, 2026, 4–8 p.m.
    Charles Houston Recreation Center, 901 Wythe Street
    Free outdoor celebration with food, exhibitors and live music.
  • Honoring Juneteenth at the Athenaeum
    Friday, June 19, 2026, 6–8 p.m.
    201 Prince Street
    Free, family-friendly event with art, African drumming, poetry, vendors, Adinkra printmaking and featured performers.
  • More to Explore
    Visit Alexandria also lists Lee-Fendall House’s “They Lived Here Too,” Carlyle House’s “Tell Me Your Name” tour, Mount Vernon’s “Freedom Before Emancipation” family program, Manumission Tours and Black-owned businesses.

QR code to go to city page about Juneteenth

Scan Before You Go

Juneteenth schedules, locations and program details may change after press time. Scan the QR code for the City of Alexandria’s official Juneteenth page and latest updates

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, the award-winning Alexandria news publication she founded in 2010 with a mission of celebrating community, culture, and all the good news happening across the city. A longtime community advocate and storyteller, Mary was selected for the Alexandria Chamber of Commerce inaugural 40 Under 40 class and has served as President of Living Legends of Alexandria since 2022. Known for her deep local roots, sharp editorial instincts, and passion for connecting people through journalism, she has spent decades chronicling the personalities, businesses, events, and civic life that make Alexandria unique. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, Virginia, and has been part of Alexandria’s publishing and media community since 1987.
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