Black-owned Businesses in Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh Celebrates Juneteenth Freedom Day
Pittsburgh Embraces Juneteenth – the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States.
Pittsburgh will celebrate the Western Pennsylvania Juneteenth Homecoming Celebration June 14-16, 2024, in Point State Park and Market Square!
This free, family-friendly event is a Celebration of all Cities and Boroughs in Allegheny County and will feature African American Culture Education, speakers, live music and local vendors!
2024 Juneteenth Homecoming Celebration | Point State Park + Market Square
2024 Performance Schedule
Friday, June 14:
- Freeway + Beanie Sigel (Point State Park)
- Arrested Development (Point State Park)
- KLYMAXX (Market Square)
Saturday, June 15:
- Elle Varner (Point State Park)
- Brownstone (Point State Park)
- Keke Wyatt (Point State Park)
- Blackbyrds (Market Square)
Sunday, June 16:
- Kelly Price (Point State Park)
- Stokley (Point State Park)
- Adam Hawley (Market Square)
More Event Information
2024 Juneteenth-Voting Rights Parade
WPA Juneteenth will conduct the Juneteenth-Voting Rights Parade on Saturday, June 15, 2024.
The Juneteenth-Voting Rights Parade is a reenactment of the 1870 Jubilee of Freemen Parade and Pittsburgh's 1914 Women's Suffrage Parade.
2024 Juneteenth In-The-Square | Market Square
Returning for 2024, the Juneteenth Freedom Festival will welcome dozens of minority-owned small businesses, artisans and other vendors at a Juneteenth Minority Vendor Plaza along Liberty and Penn Avenues, just outside of Point State Park.
At 10 a.m. Saturday, June 15, the Grand Jubilee Juneteenth Parade will make its way through Downtown Pittsburgh, followed by a voting rights forum and a salute to military service at 1 p.m.
Continue the celebration a few weeks later at the 2024 Pittsburgh Black Music Festival, July 11-13, 2024. Also hosted at Point State Park and Market Square in Downtown Pittsburgh, the five-day festival features live jazz, gospel, hip-hop, RnB, funk, blues and soul performances.
History of Juneteenth
On June 19, 1865, two and a half years after President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, Union General Gordon Granger led thousands of federal troops to Galveston, Texas, to announce that the Civil War had ended, and slaves had been freed.
“Juneteenth” serves as a way to celebrate and commemorate the news shared on June 19, 1865. Early celebrations included reassurance among descendants, praying and gathering of remaining family members. In fact, many of the activities present at the first Juneteenth celebrations, including fishing, barbecuing and baseball, are still present today. Most importantly, the day is a time for education and self-improvement.
On June 19, 2019, Pennsylvania officially designated June 19 a state holiday – “Juneteenth National Freedom Day.” In August 2020, Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto declared that Juneteenth will become a City holiday in 2021; and in October, Allegheny County Council made Juneteenth a county holiday beginning in 2021.
For more information on the 2024 Western Pennsylvania Juneteenth Celebration & Black Music Festival, please visit their website.