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The Army has confirmed it will rename seven installations, originally named for Confederate soldiers but changed in 2023 under a federal mandate.
In North Carolina on Wednesday, the commander in chief had the crowd roaring its support. Paying a visit to Fort Bragg in the ...
Fort Rucker is back. But this time it’s not named for Confederate Colonel Edmund Rucker but for World War I Capt. Edward W. Rucker, a recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross. Rucker doesn’t have ...
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) - About a year and a half after it became Fort Eisenhower, the local Army post became Fort Gordon again – and unlike the previous name change, this one happened overnight. The ...
During a visit to Fort Bragg in North Carolina, President Donald Trump said that seven military bases once named for Confederate military figures — and then renamed under former President Joe Biden ...
Va., criticized President Donald Trump's plan to restore the names of Fort Lee and other installations formerly named for ...
The bases wouldn't be formally named after Confederates who fought against the U.S. during the Civil War, but instead after other service members who share similar names.
The Army post, originally named for Confederate Gen. John Bell Hood, was renamed in 2023 to honor Richard E. Cavazos, America's first Hispanic 4-star ...
The Trump administration is restoring the names of seven military installations that previously honored Confederate figures, including one in Augusta.
Several U.S. Army bases, including three in Virginia, will return to their original Confederate-linked names. However, their ...
The Forts were first renamed to wipe away the names of Confederate leaders who fought to keep slavery legal during the Civil War.