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    Closing a Chapter of History, Last Army Base Ditches Confederate Namesake Following Years-Long Effort

    Closing a Chapter of History, Last Army Base Ditches Confederate Namesake Following Years-Long Effort

    The Army on Friday redesignated the last of nine installations that had been named after Civil War-era Confederates, completing a process that began nearly three years ago with an order from Congress.

    The final , previously known as Gordon after a Confederate lieutenant general, was renamed Fort Eisenhower during a ceremony Friday on the base's parade field. The new namesake, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, served as the supreme allied commander in during World War II, and also signed the Civil Rights Act of 1957 — the first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction — while in the White House, according to his presidential library.

    The ceremony closes a chapter of history for the Army and the bases, many of which have played key roles for generations. The scrubbing of Confederate tributes became a bipartisan effort in Congress following racial unrest across the U.S., including outcry over the police killing of George Floyd. The legislation was carried out by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin — the first Black person to hold the top post — over the past year as the military seeks to be more inclusive.

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    The country's most iconic bases — as well as some smaller, less famous facilities — were nearly all renamed for military heroes and historical figures.

    Fort Cavazos in Texas, formerly Fort Hood, was renamed…

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