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Installation Management Command, Direct Reporting Units
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Installation Management Command, Direct Reporting Units
Posted on May 24, 2022
Panel unveils nine Army base name recommendations
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New installation names were released. What do you think?
Fort Benning, Ga. — recommended to be renamed Fort Moore, for Lt. Gen. Hal Moore and his wife, Julia. Hal Moore received the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism in the Vietnam War. Julia Moore was an advocate for military families.
Fort Bragg, N.C. — recommended to be renamed Fort Liberty, after the value of liberty.
Fort Gordon, Ga. — recommended to be renamed Fort Eisenhower, after President Dwight Eisenhower, who also served as general of the Army.
Fort A.P. Hill, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Walker, after Dr. Mary Walker, the Army’s first female surgeon.
Fort Hood, Tx. — recommended to be renamed Fort Cavazos, after Gen. Richard Cavazos, who received the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism in the Vietnam War
Fort Lee, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Gregg-Adams, after Lt. Gen. Arthur Gregg and Lt. Col. Charity Adams. Gregg was a key figure in the integration of black soldiers into the Army. Adams was one of the highest ranking female soldiers in World War II.
Fort Pickett, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Barfoot, after Tech. Sgt. Van T. Barfoot, a Medal of Honor recipient.
Fort Polk, La. — recommended to be renamed Fort Johnson, after Sgt. William Henry Johnson, a Medal of Honor recipient.
Fort Rucker, Ala. — recommended to be renamed Fort Novosel after Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael J. Novosel Sr., a Medal of Honor recipient.
Fort Benning, Ga. — recommended to be renamed Fort Moore, for Lt. Gen. Hal Moore and his wife, Julia. Hal Moore received the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism in the Vietnam War. Julia Moore was an advocate for military families.
Fort Bragg, N.C. — recommended to be renamed Fort Liberty, after the value of liberty.
Fort Gordon, Ga. — recommended to be renamed Fort Eisenhower, after President Dwight Eisenhower, who also served as general of the Army.
Fort A.P. Hill, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Walker, after Dr. Mary Walker, the Army’s first female surgeon.
Fort Hood, Tx. — recommended to be renamed Fort Cavazos, after Gen. Richard Cavazos, who received the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism in the Vietnam War
Fort Lee, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Gregg-Adams, after Lt. Gen. Arthur Gregg and Lt. Col. Charity Adams. Gregg was a key figure in the integration of black soldiers into the Army. Adams was one of the highest ranking female soldiers in World War II.
Fort Pickett, Va. — recommended to be renamed Fort Barfoot, after Tech. Sgt. Van T. Barfoot, a Medal of Honor recipient.
Fort Polk, La. — recommended to be renamed Fort Johnson, after Sgt. William Henry Johnson, a Medal of Honor recipient.
Fort Rucker, Ala. — recommended to be renamed Fort Novosel after Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael J. Novosel Sr., a Medal of Honor recipient.
Panel unveils nine Army base name recommendations
Posted from armytimes.com
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 57
Posted >1 y ago
Appeasement of the same people who want to receive reparations even though the last slaves passed away probably 50 years ago.
Virtue signaling for the wrong reasons just like Nancy Pelosi was virtue signalling with the Kinte cloth that she didn't know was part of the slave trade Empire.
You can call me racist or whatever I don't care. I don't give a damn but I just think it's Much Ado About Nothing.
Virtue signaling for the wrong reasons just like Nancy Pelosi was virtue signalling with the Kinte cloth that she didn't know was part of the slave trade Empire.
You can call me racist or whatever I don't care. I don't give a damn but I just think it's Much Ado About Nothing.
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SSG (Join to see) LTC John Griscom Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth SSG Steven Mangus CPT (Join to see) CWO4 Terrence Clark SFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTM LTC Trent Klug
In the future, if I get corrected for saying that I was at Fort McClellan for basic training, Fort Bragg North Carolina for civil affairs training and deployed to Afghanistan from Fort Hood, I'm going to tell them to sftu!
SSG (Join to see) LTC John Griscom Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth SSG Steven Mangus CPT (Join to see) CWO4 Terrence Clark SFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTM LTC Trent Klug
In the future, if I get corrected for saying that I was at Fort McClellan for basic training, Fort Bragg North Carolina for civil affairs training and deployed to Afghanistan from Fort Hood, I'm going to tell them to sftu!
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SGT Apollo Sharpe
2 y
CW3 (Join to see) Why would I care what’s in the hearts & minds of traitors who created a bs country founded on their supposed right to continue slavery? It’s wholly irrelevant. They did what they did, & I don’t support naming anything after them.
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CW3 (Join to see)
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You're missing the whole point of what I said. You saying you don't support naming anything after them is mute, as they are already named after them (for reasons I have stated which you still have not addressed to include the fact that Confederates by law are also American veterans) and that have since developed a history/legacy all their own far removed from the Civil War. It is a significant, unneeded cost to rename these bases now only to appease the feelings of those who will never be satisfied. There is no real point to this, it's a waste of money, time, & effort, and it erases the actual honored history of these bases which has nothing to do with the Civil War.
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SFC Gary Fox
2 y
CW3 (Join to see) - All the bases named after confederates were in the states that seceded from the union. These bases were established in the southern states for logistical and training purposes. The government had to use imminent domain to obtain the land, which angered many property owners. To appease the southern people, the bases were named after confederates. Racism had nothing to do with it. Changing the names, taking down statutes and monuments to confederates isn't going to resolve racism. Do these things is nothing more than an attempt of appeasement. These things should have been left alone to serve as an example of what division in the country can result in - a civil war. We should learn from history, not attempt to change it.
Reparations will do nothing to resolve racism either. Nobody today has ever been a slave. Why should they get a check from the government which will do noting more than to cause division, increase the nation's debt to pay for it, and increase inflation. Paying reparations will do more harm than good.
Reparations will do nothing to resolve racism either. Nobody today has ever been a slave. Why should they get a check from the government which will do noting more than to cause division, increase the nation's debt to pay for it, and increase inflation. Paying reparations will do more harm than good.
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Posted >1 y ago
I have no dog in this fight. I don't mind the names change selections because they are all after heroes and those that made history. I do however, have a problem with renaming bases to rename bases and appease a woke generation and knee jerk reactions from the past couple of years. You can't erase history good or bad and when you do, it will come back to bite you. We need to teach and remember all of it. Take for instance Ft Lee VA. Named after General Lee. OK...not Robert E. Lee like everyone thinks and has been taught but Fort Lee was named for General Charles Lee AFTER George Washington and his troops had camped at Mount Constitution overlooking Burdett's Landing, in defense of New York City. So why change the name? Because everyone doesn't know the full story and I am sure there are others like this.
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I am sorry sir, but General Charles Lee was court martialed and dismissed from Continental Service for insubordination and conduct unbecoming an Officer and a Gentleman in 1779. This conduct was directed at both his commanding generals and the Continental Congress.
The only fort named after him was Ft. Lee, NJ (during his lifetime).
Honestly sir, an installation of such recent founding as Ft. Lee, would have never been named after a disgraced general from the War of The Revolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Lee_(general)
The only fort named after him was Ft. Lee, NJ (during his lifetime).
Honestly sir, an installation of such recent founding as Ft. Lee, would have never been named after a disgraced general from the War of The Revolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Lee_(general)
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Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth
2 y
CPT (Join to see) - However, if you read the entire history (attached below) of General Lee he was insubordinate at the end to Washington and would have been found not guilty of two counts but if they did it would have not looked favorably on Washington, so they went with all counts. He fought valiantly in the Rev War and was a POW at one time. "Court martial-Even before the day was out, Lee was cast in the role of villain, and his vilification became an integral part of after-battle reports written by Washington's officers.[55] Lee continued in his post as second-in-command immediately after the battle, and it is likely that the issue would have simply subsided if he had let it go. On June 30, after protesting his innocence to all who would listen, Lee wrote an insolent letter to Washington in which he blamed "dirty earwigs" for turning Washington against him, claimed his decision to retreat had saved the day and pronounced Washington to be "guilty of an act of cruel injustice" towards him. Instead of the apology Lee was tactlessly seeking, Washington replied that the tone of Lee's letter was "highly improper" and that he would initiate an official inquiry into Lee's conduct. Lee's response demanding a court martial was again insolent, and Washington ordered his arrest and set about obliging him.
The court convened on July 4, 1778, and three charges were laid before Lee: disobeying orders in not attacking on the morning of the battle, contrary to "repeated instructions"; conducting an "unnecessary, disorderly, and shameful retreat"; and disrespect towards the commander-in-chief. The trial concluded on August 12, 1778, and the accusations and counter-accusations continued to fly until the verdict was confirmed by Congress on December 5, 1778.[59] Lee's defense was articulate but fatally flawed by his efforts to turn it into a personal contest between himself and Washington. He denigrated the commander-in-chief's role in the battle, calling Washington's official account "from beginning to end a most abominable damn'd lie", and disingenuously cast his own decision to retreat as a "masterful manoeuvre" designed to lure the British onto the main body.[60] Washington remained aloof from the controversy, but his allies portrayed Lee as a traitor who had allowed the British to escape and linked him to the previous winter's alleged conspiracy against Washington.[61]
Although the first two charges proved to be dubious,[c] Lee was undeniably guilty of disrespect, and Washington was too powerful to cross.[65] As the historian John Shy noted, "Under the circumstances, an acquittal on the first two charges would have been a vote of no-confidence in Washington."[66] Lee was found guilty on all three counts, though the court deleted "shameful" from the second and noted the retreat was "disorderly" only "in some few instances." Lee was suspended from the army for a year, a sentence so lenient that some interpreted it as a vindication of all but the charge of disrespect.[67] Lee continued to argue his case and rage against Washington to anyone who would listen, prompting both Lieutenant Colonel John Laurens, one of Washington's aides, and Steuben to challenge him to a duel.[68] Only the duel with Laurens actually transpired, during which Lee was wounded. In 1780, Lee sent such a poorly received letter to Congress that it terminated his service with the army."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Lee_(general)
The court convened on July 4, 1778, and three charges were laid before Lee: disobeying orders in not attacking on the morning of the battle, contrary to "repeated instructions"; conducting an "unnecessary, disorderly, and shameful retreat"; and disrespect towards the commander-in-chief. The trial concluded on August 12, 1778, and the accusations and counter-accusations continued to fly until the verdict was confirmed by Congress on December 5, 1778.[59] Lee's defense was articulate but fatally flawed by his efforts to turn it into a personal contest between himself and Washington. He denigrated the commander-in-chief's role in the battle, calling Washington's official account "from beginning to end a most abominable damn'd lie", and disingenuously cast his own decision to retreat as a "masterful manoeuvre" designed to lure the British onto the main body.[60] Washington remained aloof from the controversy, but his allies portrayed Lee as a traitor who had allowed the British to escape and linked him to the previous winter's alleged conspiracy against Washington.[61]
Although the first two charges proved to be dubious,[c] Lee was undeniably guilty of disrespect, and Washington was too powerful to cross.[65] As the historian John Shy noted, "Under the circumstances, an acquittal on the first two charges would have been a vote of no-confidence in Washington."[66] Lee was found guilty on all three counts, though the court deleted "shameful" from the second and noted the retreat was "disorderly" only "in some few instances." Lee was suspended from the army for a year, a sentence so lenient that some interpreted it as a vindication of all but the charge of disrespect.[67] Lee continued to argue his case and rage against Washington to anyone who would listen, prompting both Lieutenant Colonel John Laurens, one of Washington's aides, and Steuben to challenge him to a duel.[68] Only the duel with Laurens actually transpired, during which Lee was wounded. In 1780, Lee sent such a poorly received letter to Congress that it terminated his service with the army."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Lee_(general)
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CPT (Join to see)
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Sir,
I wasn't making a statement about whether he had been properly treated or not. My entire interest in the matter was to inform about the perceived character of his service and how it ended.
V/R
WCF+
I wasn't making a statement about whether he had been properly treated or not. My entire interest in the matter was to inform about the perceived character of his service and how it ended.
V/R
WCF+
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Posted >1 y ago
I don’t believe the military of all organizations would get involved with the woke politicians and completely deny history. What a shame. Kinda disappointed in todays military leadership. The military continues to go down the drain. Military officers no longer understand the meaning of Duty, Honor, Country.
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1SG Frank Boynton
>1 y
In 20 years the history books will say America started WWII by attacking the Japanese in their own waters.
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Your observation, "Military officers no longer understand the meaning of Duty, Honor, Country." is an overly broad generalization that cannot stand up to scrutiny. The current administration conducted a purge of all field grade commissioned officers, warrant officers above CW3, and NCO's E7 and above. Nevertheless every good officer cannot have been eliminated via this route. From the good officers that remain will come the renewal of the US Armed Forces of tomorrow.
Nevertheless, I am forced to agree with your observation regarding most current general officers and careerists of whatever rank.
Nevertheless, I am forced to agree with your observation regarding most current general officers and careerists of whatever rank.
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