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		U.S. commission recommends renaming nine Army bases to strip Confederate 
		legacy
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		 [May 25, 2022] WASHINGTON 
		(Reuters) - A Congressionally mandated commission announced on Tuesday 
		its recommendations for changes to the names of nine U.S. Army bases 
		that currently honor the Confederacy and Confederate leaders. 
 The recommended changes, if implemented, would name bases in honor of 
		Black, Hispanic and female American heroes, including Mary Edwards 
		Walker, the only woman to win the Medal of Honor for her service as a 
		surgeon during the Civil War. They are:
 
 * Fort Benning, Georgia – rename Fort Moore after Lieutenant General Hal 
		and Julia Moore.
 
 * Fort Bragg, North Carolina – rename Fort Liberty after the value of 
		liberty.
 
 * Fort Gordon, Georgia – rename Fort Eisenhower after General of the 
		Army Dwight Eisenhower.
 
 * Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia – rename Fort Walker after Dr. Mary Walker
 
 * Fort Hood, Texas – rename Fort Cavazos after General Richard Cavazos
 
 * Fort Lee, Virginia – rename Fort Gregg-Adams after Lieutenant General 
		Arthur Gregg and Lieutenant Colonel Charity Adams
 
 
		
		 
		* Fort Pickett, Virginia – rename Fort Barfoot after Technical Sergeant 
		Van T. Barfoot
 
 * Fort Polk, Louisiana – rename Fort Johnson after Sergeant William 
		Henry Johnson
 
 * Fort Rucker, Alabama – rename Fort Novosel after Chief Warrant Officer 
		4 Michael J. Novosel, Sr.
 
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			Flags and a monument are seen at the entrance to Fort Benning in 
			Columbus, Georgia, U.S. September 8, 2020. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage/File 
			Photo 
            
			
			
			 
            The commission, which has no power to change the 
			names on its own, said it will complete a written report for 
			Congress by Oct. 1. Under previous legislation passed by Congress, 
			the Pentagon will be required to implement changes by 2024, it said.
 The United States has been re-examining its history and removing 
			segregationist symbols across the country following the May 25, 
			2020, murder of George Floyd, a Black man killed by a white police 
			officer in Minneapolis.
 
 That re-examination has extended to the U.S. military, which quickly 
			issued a de facto ban on displaying the Confederate flag at U.S. 
			military installations. Congress then passed legislation requiring 
			changes to base names, despite fierce opposition from then-President 
			Donald Trump.
 
 Confederate flags and base names can be offensive to many Americans, 
			who see them as reminders of the enslavement of Black Americans and 
			a symbol of white supremacy.
 
 (Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
            
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