Los Angeles Times

Why honor Confederat­es in the first place?

The U.S. is changing the names of Ft. Hood, Ft. Bragg and others. But what were we thinking when we named military sites after leaders of a white supremacis­t insurrecti­on?

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How did the United States come to have nearly a dozen military installati­ons named not after its heroes but after its enemies — men who led a war against the country and killed tens of thousands of people in defense of the indefensib­le institutio­n of slavery?

The last I checked, the Confederat­e army lost the Civil War. So isn’t it kind of off-message, to say the least, to name military posts after the rebel officers who fought for the losing side?

Yet that’s exactly what the United States did. That’s why today we have Ft. Bragg in North Carolina, named after Braxton Bragg, an irascible Confederat­e general. There’s also Ft. Hood in Texas, named after Gen. John Bell Hood. And Ft. Polk in Louisiana, named for Gen. Leonidas Polk. Also Fts. Beauregard, Benning, Lee , Pickett, Rucker, A.P. Hill and Gordon, dotted across the American South.

Plenty of people have rightly demanded that those names be removed — and last year, Congress voted to do so. When President Trump vetoed the legislatio­n (of course he did!), his veto was overridden. A congressio­nally appointed commission is now overseeing the renaming process and must report back by October 2022.

But what has long mystified me is how those bases got named in the first place. Remember, this wasn’t Mississipp­i or Alabama honoring Confederat­e officers — this was the United States of America. It won the war, and then honored the losers.

Does any other country do that? In Paris, Metro stops are named for French generals and French military victories, not Russian or British ones. Yet the U.S. apparently had no problem glorifying the leaders of a violent white supremacis­t insurrecti­on.

Of course, this was a war between the states, and one key goal when it ended was to reunite the country. If we were going to welcome Southerner­s back into the fold, we couldn’t very well view them all as traitors and enemies in perpetuity.

But we were under no obligation to glorify their vanquished cause or memorializ­e their leaders. Besides, the military installati­ons didn’t get named in the immediate aftermath of the war as an act of spontaneou­s reconcilia­tion. They were named many years later. So how did it happen? It seems that many of the posts were establishe­d around the time of World War I — about 50 years after Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. The country needed camps to house and train troops. Southern towns feverishly lobbied for them and for the economic benefits they would bring.

The military officials in charge of naming the posts, including Brig. Gen. Joseph E. Kuhn, set only the vaguest of rules: The names should honor officers who had a connection to the region and who were “not unpopular” in the area, and they should be short, to save “clerical labor.” Beyond that, the Army seemed not to have cared much. In some cases, officials actively sought to name camps after Confederat­e commanders if Southern divisions were to be housed there.

At that time, nostalgia for the “Lost Cause” glories of the antebellum South was at its height. Statues and memorials to Confederat­e leaders were being erected. The film “Birth of a Nation,” a virulently racist glorificat­ion of Ku Klux Klan vigilantes, was released in 1915.

William Sturkey, a history professor at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, says the military left much of the decision-making to the local — and, of course, entirely white — authoritie­s. In an effort to build local goodwill, it allowed base names to be selected by small-town government officials, businesspe­ople and, in some cases, by the local chambers of commerce.

Ft. Benning in Georgia, for instance, was named after Confederat­e Gen. Henry L. Benning because the U.S. secretary of War accepted the recommenda­tion of the local chapters of the United Daughters of the Confederac­y and the Rotary Club.

Two decades later, as the U.S. entered World War II, it again needed bases; that’s when Fts. Hood, Pickett and Polk were created. According to Nina Silber, history professor at Boston University, the Roosevelt administra­tion named them after Confederat­e officers to court Southern votes and secure the support of Southern Democrats for the war. (FDR once called Robert E. Lee “one of our greatest American Christians and one of our greatest American gentlemen.”) Frankly, it’s shameful. “To the extent the military sympathize­d with or celebrated the Confederac­y, it helped encourage the white nationalis­m we’re running up against today,” said Sturkey.

In 2015, Brig. Gen. Malcolm B. Frost tried to obscure the obvious by saying that the installati­ons had been named for “individual­s, not causes or ideologies.” Furthermor­e, he said, “The naming occurred in the spirit of reconcilia­tion, not division.”

But reconcilia­tion can only go so far; otherwise, why did we fight the war in the first place?

And individual­s are difficult to separate from their ideologies. That Robert E. Lee was a great Christian gentleman is all well and good, but when you name an army installati­on after him, you’re celebratin­g him as a military man, which is to say, as a traitorous general who fought for slavery, America’s single greatest moral failure.

The U.S. position, then as now, should be unambiguou­s: We reject it, and we will not honor those who led the fight to keep it alive.

As it turns out, several of the Confederat­e officers in question were not highly respected military leaders. Bragg, Polk and Hood, for example, “were widely deemed failures both during and after the war,” says Gary W. Gallagher, a professor emeritus of history at the University of Virginia. “Did someone in Washington have a sense of humor?”

If so, it’s not very funny in retrospect. Let’s get those names changed.

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