INDIANAPOLIS — Juneteenth is the federal holiday that commemorates June 19, 1865, the day the last slaves in the United States learned they were free. Community groups around Indianapolis marked the day of liberation with celebration and inspiration.

The Indianapolis Black Firefighters Association organized a Juneteenth cookout at its headquarters, the former Indianapolis Fire Department Station 31 on 42nd Street near the Monon Trail.
"It's a mark of freedom and being able to understand where you're coming from to know where you're going," said Indianapolis Black Firefighters Association president Corey Floyd.

Visitors also received a sneak peek inside of the organization's new museum within Station 31.
Floyd said the cookout hoped to solidify the fire station's role as a place for the whole community to come together.
"This is like my backyard," Floyd said. "One of the original pop machines is still here. I don't get rid of it because firefighters gave me soda out of that. They aired up our bicycle tires when we rolled through the neighborhood. It was so important for me to serve in that same community when I became a firefighter."

While the firefighters' cookout was going on, landscapers with Keep It Beautiful Indianapolis were remodeling Charlie Wiggins Park on the city's northwest side as a Juneteenth service project.
The park, named after the first Black mechanic to repair cars at the Indianapolis 500, is beneath Interstate 65 near 29th Street. Hadiah Amit of the Northwest Landing Neighborhood Association said the community needed all of the help it could get to revitalize it.

"This park, because it had fallen into disrepair, was not safe enough to really enjoy," Amit said.
Landscapers cut down trees, replaced sod, and built new benches for the park.

Amit believes their service on Charlie Wiggins Park exemplified the meaning of Juneteenth.
"It's about freedom," Amit said. "It's bringing hope and strength and love and energy back to Black communities."
-
"It's more than a coat": How a preloved Pacers coat changed a life
At every home game, free shirts are given out, and merchandise has been flying off the shelves. For one local assistant principal, it was a donated Pacers jacket that changed his life.At just 17 years old, Pacers' DJ is the youngest in the NBA
Every time the Indiana Pacers take to the court, the energizing sound of music fills the arena. Behind the mix is a fresh face in sports entertainment—17-year-old Ben Karizim.A day in the life of a Pacers intern during the NBA Finals
Internships were extended due to the Pacers making it to the NBA finals, an experience they will never forget.How the National Weather Service surveys storm damage
The National Weather Service has confirmed two separate EF0 tornadoes in Tippecanoe County from storms on Wednesday evening, June 18.