Defense Secretary Hegseth Renames Fort Liberty To Fort Bragg—But Not After The Confederate General
The army installation’s name was changed to Fort Liberty in 2023, after Congress passed a law to rename all military bases ...
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Monday renamed the Army base Fort Liberty back to its original name of Fort Bragg, ...
Military bases should not be named "for traitors to our country but instead honor American heroes like Novosel," she wrote ...
The military base had been renamed Fort Liberty as part of an effort to rechristen bases named for Confederate officers.
The base was renamed Fort Liberty in 2023 to disassociate from Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg. It’s now named after Roland L.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth had referred to Fort Benning and Fort Bragg by their original, Confederate-inspired names.
U.S. Military bases were named after Confederate soldiers to appease white supremacists; it was right to rename them.
The base, known as Fort Liberty since 2023, originally was named for Confederate General Braxton Bragg. The Army says it now ...
Hegseth upheld our most important decision: Confederates don’t merit Defense Department commemoration.
A U.S. Army base originally named after a Confederate general, then renamed Fort Liberty, will revert to the name Fort Bragg.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Monday renamed the Army base Fort Liberty back to its original name of Fort Bragg.
Bragg, a building mover and sawmill operator from Sabbatus, Maine, was an Army paratrooper with the 17th Airborne Division in ...
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