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  1. Numerous military installations in the United States are or were named after general officers in the Confederate States Army (CSA). These are all U.S. Army or Army National Guard posts, typically named following World War I and during the 1940s.

  2. This is a list of links for U.S. Army forts and installations, organized by U.S. state or territory within the U.S. and by country if overseas. For consistency, major Army National Guard (ARNG) training facilities are included but armory locations are not.

  3. 24 mar 2023 · The cost of renaming the nine Army bases that honored the Confederacy has nearly doubled, an Army official told lawmakers Thursday. The Army expects to pay $39 million, said Lt. Gen. Kevin...

  4. 29 lis 2023 · The Army's Nine Base Name Changes Are Complete. On October 27th, 2023, Fort Gordon, GA, was redesignated as Fort Eisenhower. This change completed the Federally mandated change by the Naming Commission. As a reminder, the list of the eight other Army bases changed under the same mandate.

  5. List of recommended base replacement names of March 2022. The commission published in March 2022 the following list of 90 names it considered for use in renaming the nine army bases:

  6. 24 maj 2022 · A U.S. Army commission has recommended new names for nine military bases commemorating Confederate officers, including the head of its army, the reputed Georgia chief of the Ku Klux Klan and the...

  7. 14 kwi 2023 · The Department of Defense Naming Commission will rename nine Army installations by January 1, 2024. DTMO's website will be updated to reflect all changes by this date.

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