Sep
10
to Sep 11

JOIN US SEPT. 10 FOR A PRESIDEENTIAL DEBATE PARTY

Join with folk from all over North Texas for an evening of good people, good food and a good time at our Second Quadrennial Presidential Debate Party.

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Aug
13

Wise County Democratic Party Meet and Greet

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

6:00 pm Social Time

6:30 pm Program

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Jul
9

Wise County Democratic Party Meet and Greet

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

6:00 pm Social Time

6:30 pm Program

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Jun
11

Wise County Democratic Party Meet and Greet

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

6:00 pm Social Time

6:30 pm Program

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Jun
7

Texas Democratic Party El Paso State Convention

El Paso Texas

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May
14

Wise County Democratic Party Meet and Greet

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

6:00 pm Social Time

6:30 pm Program

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Mar
23

Wise County Democratic Party Convention

You must have voted in the Wise County Democratic Primary to attend

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur at Decatur Conference Center

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

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Mar
12

Wise County Democratic Party Meeting

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur at Decatur Conference Center

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

We must demand safe and sustainable energy!

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Feb
13

Wise County Democratic Party Meets

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur at Decatur Conference Center

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

Celebrate Wise County’s Black History in honor of Black History Month

(We are hosting speakers from Decatur’s Historic Black Community)

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Jan
9

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)

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Dec
12

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)


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Nov
14

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)


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Wise County Democratic Party Chili Cook Off FUNDRAISER
Oct
10

Wise County Democratic Party Chili Cook Off FUNDRAISER

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm Silent Auction begins,

$7 for dinner purchased by October 7, 2023 https://secure.actblue.com/donate/chilicookofffundraiser

$20 to enter your chili for the contest (money for 1st and 2nd prize comes from entry fee)

Teralingua Chili judge will award first place

Peoples Choice will award second place

Vote your favorite homemade chili and enjoy fresh homemade cornbread all while supporting candidates who will work for dignity wages, affordable healthcare, affordable housing, supporting our public schools, and environmental sustainability,

Questions, email wisedemocrats@gmail.com

Click the link below to buy a bowl of chili

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Sep
12

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)


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Jul
11

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)

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Jun
17

Juneteenth Celebration

It goes by many names. Whether you call it Emancipation Day, Freedom Day or the country’s second Independence Day, Juneteenth is one of the most important anniversaries in our nation’s history.

On June 19, 1865, Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger, who had fought for the Union, led a force of soldiers to Galveston, Texas, to deliver a very important message: The war was finally over, the Union had won, and it now had the manpower to enforce the end of slavery.

The announcement came two months after the effective conclusion of the Civil War, and even longer since President Abraham Lincoln had first signed the Emancipation Proclamation, but many enslaved Black people in Texas still weren’t free, even after that day.

That was 156 years ago. Here are the basics of Juneteenth that everyone should know.

 

What Juneteenth represents

First things first: Juneteenth gets its name from combining “June” and “nineteenth,” the day that Granger arrived in Galveston, bearing a message of freedom for the slaves there.

Upon his arrival, he read out General Order No. 3, informing the residents that slavery would no longer be tolerated and that all slaves were now free and would henceforth be treated as hired workers if they chose to remain on the plantations, according to the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Slavery did not end on Juneteenth

When Granger arrived in Galveston, there still existed around 250,000 slaves and they were not all freed immediately, or even soon. It was not uncommon for slave owners, unwilling to give up free labor, to refuse to release their slaves until forced to, in person, by a representative of the government, historian Henry Louis Gates Jr. wrote. Some would wait until one final harvest was complete, and some would just outright refuse to submit. It was a perilous time for Black people, and some former slaves who were freed or attempted to get free were attacked and killed.

For Confederate states like Texas, even before Juneteenth, there existed a “desire to hold on to that system as long as they could,” Walsh explained to NPR.

Before the reading of General Order No. 3, many slave owners in Confederate states simply chose not to tell their slaves about the Emancipation Proclamation and did not honor it. They got away with it because, before winning the war, Union soldiers were largely unable to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation in Southern states. Still, even though slavery in America would not truly come to an end until the ratification of the 13th Amendment, the Emancipation Proclamation still played a pivotal role in that process, historian Lonnie Bunch told NPR in 2013.

“What the Emancipation Proclamation does that’s so important is it begins a creeping process of emancipation where the federal government is now finally taking firm stands to say slavery is wrong and it must end,” Bunch said.


People have celebrated Juneteenth any way they can

After they were freed, some former slaves and their descendants would travel to Galveston annually in honor of Juneteenth. That tradition soon spread to other states, but it wasn’t uncommon for white people to bar Black people from celebrating in public spaces, forcing Black people to get creative. In one such case, Black community leaders in Houston saved $1,000 to purchase land in 1872 that would be devoted specifically to Juneteenth celebrations, according to the Houston Parks and Recreation Department. That land became Emancipation Park, a name that it still bears.

” ‘If you want to commemorate something, you literally have to buy land to commemorate it on’ is, I think, just a really potent example of the long-lasting reality of white supremacy,” Walsh said.

Nevertheless, Black Americans found a way to continue to celebrate and lift one another up. Early on, Juneteenth celebrations often involved helping newly freed Black folks learn about their voting rights, according to the Texas State Historical Association. Rodeos and horseback riding were also common. Now, Juneteenth celebrations commonly involve cookouts, parades, church services, musical performances and other public events, Walsh explained.

It’s a day to “commemorate the hardships endured by ancestors,” Walsh said. He added, “It really exemplifies the survival instinct, the ways that we as a community really make something out of nothing. … It’s about empowerment and hopefulness.”

And there’s reason to be hopeful. After literal decades of activists campaigning for change, Congress has approved Juneteenth as a federal holiday.

*This article originally from NPR found here: https://www.npr.org/2021/06/17/1007315228/juneteenth-what-is-origin-observation

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Jun
13

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

6:00 pm (snacks and socializing)

6:30 pm-7:30 pm (Organize for a safer, healthier more equitable government)

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May
9

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

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Apr
11

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites by Marriott (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

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Mar
14

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn and Suites by Marriott (1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234)

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Feb
7

Wise County Democratic Party Organizing for Safe Responsible Government

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur at Decatur Conference Center

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

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Dec
13

Wise County Democratic Party Social/Christmas Party

Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott Decatur at Decatur Conference Center

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

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Nov
15

Election Worker Appreciation Party

Fairfield Inn and Suites by Marrott

1910 US-380, Decatur, TX 76234

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Nov
8

Election Day

If you have waited until Election Day to vote Wise County has 21 different polling locations on Election Day. Please check your voter registration card to see which voting precinct you are in.

https://www.co.wise.tx.us/DocumentCenter/View/3483/November-8-Election-Day-Polling-Locations

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