It would cost $21M to rename Fort Gordon, other posts

AUGUSTA, Ga. - Renaming Fort Gordon and eight other Army posts that honor Confederate officers would cost a total of $21 million if the installations rebrand everything from marquees and street signs to water towers, according to an independent commission.
The Naming Commission released its final report on recommending the new Army post names to Congress on Monday. It included a 17-page list of assets that are tied to the Confederacy, from the decals on 300 recycling bins at Fort Bragg in North Carolina to the sign for a softball field at Fort Hood in Texas.
Locally, Fort Gordon would be renamed Fort Eisenhower in honor of the 34th U.S. president.
The Army established then-Camp Gordon in 1941 as part of the rapid expansion of America’s military, according to the commission.
It was named for John Brown Gordon, a slave owner, attorney and senior officer in the Confederate army.
While lacking in any military education or experience, he “displayed remarkable leadership and tactical capabilities” as one of the Confederate army’s most successful commanders, the commission says. He rose from captain to lieutenant general during the Civil War. After the war, he was a staunch opponent of Reconstruction policies.
READ THE REPORT:
The commission’s report is the latest step in a broader effort by the military to confront racial injustice, most recently in the aftermath of the May 2020 police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
The renaming process was laid out in a law ed by Congress in late 2020. The secretary of defense is expected to implement the commission’s plan no later than Jan. 1, 2024.
Monday’s report provided detailed — and sometimes unflattering — descriptions of the Confederate officers whose names would be removed as well as the accomplishments of those whose names would replace them.
The commission wrote that Fort Benning in Georgia was named after a “lawyer, ardent secessionist, bitter opponent of abolition and senior officer in the Confederate Army.”
The report stated that Henry L. Benning “is on record as saying that he would rather be stricken with illness and starvation than see slaves liberated and given equality as citizens.”
The commission recommends renaming the post after a married couple: Lt. Gen. Hal Moore, who served in Vietnam and received the Distinguished Service Cross, and his wife Julia, who prompted the creation of teams that do in-person notifications of military casualties.
Renaming the post would cost just under $5 million, the report stated. The effort would target anything from the wording on airfield doors to the name of an airstrip. It would also include removing Confederate names from paver stones on a walk to a memorial that honors U.S. Army Rangers.
Fort Bragg, which is home to the 82nd Airborne Division, was named after a “slave-owning plantation owner and senior Confederate Army officer,” the report said.
Braxton Bragg is “considered one of the worst generals of the Civil War; most of the battles he was involved in ended in defeat and resulted in tremendous losses for the Confederate Army; highly consequential to the ultimate defeat of the Confederacy,” the commission wrote.
Renaming the post to Fort Liberty would cost about $6.3 million, the report said. It would include rebranding 45 police vehicles and 15 emergency services vehicles, such as fire engines and ambulances.
The other installations recommended for renaming are Fort A.P. Hill, Fort Lee and Fort Pickett in Virginia, Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Polk in Louisiana and Fort Rucker in Alabama.
For years, U.S. military officials had defended the naming of installations after Confederate officers. But in the aftermath of the Floyd killing, and the months of racial unrest that followed, Congress ordered a comprehensive plan to rename the military posts and hundreds of other federal assets such as roads, buildings, memorials, signs and landmarks that honored rebel leaders.
The change in the military’s thinking was reflected in congressional testimony by Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the t Chiefs of Staff, a month after Floyd’s death. He said the current names could be reminders to Black soldiers that rebel officers fought for an institution that may have enslaved their ancestors.
The commission said subsequent installments of the final report will address assets at the military academies and other places within the Department of Defense.
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