Trump
Says Army Bases Will Revert to Confederate Names
The move
would reverse a yearslong effort to remove names and symbols honoring the
Confederacy from the military.
Chris
Cameron
By Chris
Cameron
Chris
Cameron covered the yearslong effort to rename Army bases that had originally
been named for Confederate generals. He reported from Washington.
June 10,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/11/opinion/trump-wants-the-military-to-be-more-like-trump.html
President
Trump, during a speech at Fort Bragg, N.C., said on Tuesday that he would
restore the names of all Army bases that were named for Confederate generals
but were ordered changed by Congress in the waning days of his first
administration.
His move
skirts the law mandating the removal of Confederate symbols from the military
through the same maneuver used to restore the name of Fort Bragg, which was
briefly renamed Fort Liberty. In a statement, the Army said it would “take
immediate action” to restore the old names of the bases originally honoring
Confederates, but the base names would instead honor other American soldiers
with similar names and initials.
For example,
Fort Eisenhower in Georgia, honoring President Dwight D. Eisenhower — who led
the D-Day landings during World War II — would revert to the name Fort Gordon,
once honoring John Brown Gordon, the Confederate slave owner and suspected Ku
Klux Klan member. This time around, however, the Army said the base would
instead honor Master Sgt. Gary Gordon, who fought in the Battle of Mogadishu in
Somalia.
Mr. Trump,
however, contradicted that explanation in his announcement, at one point saying
that the Army would be “restoring” the name of one Army base in Virginia — Fort
Gregg-Adams — to “Fort Robert E. Lee,” previously named for the commander of
the Confederate army. The Army said in its statement that the base would be
renamed to honor Pvt. Fitz Lee, a member of the all-Black Buffalo Soldiers who
was awarded a Medal of Honor after serving in the Spanish-American War.
Mr. Trump
made the announcement as he took a victory lap for the renaming of the Army
installation at Fort Bragg, N.C., which had been originally named for Braxton
Bragg, the Confederate general. Fort Bragg was renamed to Fort Liberty after
Congress moved to strip the base of its Confederate name in 2020, mandating a
new one.
“Can you
believe they changed that name in the last administration for a little bit?”
Mr. Trump asked, as soldiers in the crowd loudly booed. “Fort Bragg is in.
That’s the name. And Fort Bragg it shall always remain. That’s never going to
be happening again.”
Delivering a
campaign-style speech surrounded by hundreds of Army troops, Mr. Trump sought
to turn the page on what was an embarrassing political defeat late in his first
term. An overwhelming majority of Congress — Democrats and Republicans —
overrrode his veto amid the fallout of protests after the murder of George
Floyd to pass a bill that included a provision to rename the nine Army bases
honoring Confederate generals.
Those bases
were ultimately renamed for people who “embody the best of the United States
Army,” according to the naming commission that recommended the initial changes.
They included decorated officers, enlisted troops who survived harrowing trials
in battle, and one civilian: Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, a Civil War surgeon and
the only woman ever awarded a Medal of Honor.
One of the
officers, Lt. Col. Charity Adams Earley, was honored by Congress earlier this
year, with Speaker Mike Johnson presenting an award for the Six Triple Eight —
the only all-Black, all-female Army battalion to serve in Europe during World
War II — to her descendants.
If Mr.
Trump’s effort to again rename the bases is successful, all of their names will
be struck.
The original
naming of the nine Army bases was part of a movement to glorify the Confederacy
and advance the Lost Cause myth that the Civil War was fought over states’
rights and not slavery.
Mr. Trump
and other conservatives had raged against the name changes, which were
finalized under the Biden administration, arguing that “wokeness” was softening
the military and wiping away important elements of American tradition and
heritage. Mr. Trump, who has repeatedly defended monuments honoring
Confederates, vowed during the 2024 campaign to revert the name of Fort Bragg
to honor Braxton Bragg, who was widely considered by his fellow Confederates
and many historians to have been a poor commander.
Mr. Trump’s
pledge was brought to fruition in March, but with a twist that seemed both a
rewriting of history and an internet troll. Fort Liberty again became Fort
Bragg, not in honor of the Confederate general but in memory of Pvt. Roland L.
Bragg, a previously obscure infantryman who had served at Fort Bragg and fought
in the Battle of the Bulge during World War II.
Pete
Hegseth, the defense secretary, announced a similar name change shortly after
that appeared intended to sidestep the law banning the honoring of
Confederates: Fort Moore — renamed in 2023 for Lt. Gen. Harold G. Moore and his
wife, Julia — would again be called Fort Benning. Instead of honoring Henry L.
Benning, a Confederate and white supremacist, the base would be named for Cpl.
Fred G. Benning, who served during World War I.
Another name
change by the Army on Tuesday appeared particularly tortured to fit the old
name while still ostensibly honoring different soldiers: Fort Walker, named for
the Civil War surgeon, would be renamed again to Fort A.P. Hill. That base was
originally named to honor Ambrose Powell Hill, a Confederate officer who was
killed late in the war. The Army said on Tuesday that the base would be renamed
“Fort Anderson-Pinn-Hill” to honor Lt. Col. Edward Hill, First Sgt. Robert A.
Pinn and Pvt. Bruce Anderson who fought for the United States during the Civil
War.
Chris
Cameron is a Times reporter covering Washington, focusing on breaking news and
the Trump administration.

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