“Officials plan to substantially alter an exhibit that memorializes nine people enslaved”
Its article said:
More than a dozen displays at Independence National Historical Park that share historical information about slavery during the founding of United States have been flagged for a content review in connection with an executive order from President Donald Trump. . . .White House staff had written an executive order for Donald Trump to sign with his distinctive signature that singled out the Independence park for training interpretive rangers to be sensitive to racial issues.
The President’s House Site, where Presidents George Washington and John Adams once lived, came under particular scrutiny with six exhibits flagged for review. The exhibit focuses on the contradictory coexistence of liberty and slavery during the founding of America and memorializes the people Washington enslaved.
This Wednesday was the administration’s initial deadline for removing content it might deem “inappropriate.” Early in the week more articles appeared. The New York Times reported: “At Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, officials plan to substantially alter an exhibit that memorializes nine people enslaved by George Washington.”
A day before, the Washington Post said:
That park includes the President’s House Site, where George Washington served as president before the capital moved to Washington, D.C. The house was demolished in the 1800s, but an exhibit opened there in 2010 based on archaeological excavations.Alerting the news media to this pressure from above is the first step to resisting it. Philadelphians quickly protested the prospect of erasing information about slavery in the park, the Inquirer reported on Tuesday.
Local advocates had pushed for the exhibit to provide in-depth information on the lives of nine people who were enslaved by George Washington while he lived in the house as president. The exhibit includes their names carved into a granite wall.
“This is not just a handful of signs that tell the story of slavery,” said Ed Stierli, senior Mid-Atlantic regional director at the advocacy group National Parks Conservation Association. “This is a place that tells the complete story not just of slavery in America, but what it was like for those who were enslaved by George Washington.”
Trying to extricate slavery from the President’s House exhibit would fundamentally change the nature of the site, said Cindy MacLeod, who was superintendent of Independence National Historical Park for 15 years until 2023.
“This is just one of many exhibits at Independence National Historical Park,” MacLeod said. “And to me, it’s a vital one.”
Independence National Historical Park commemorates how Americans sought their liberties and political rights in the late 1700s. The lives and struggles of Americans born into literal slavery, some of whom managed to secure their freedom on that very site, fit right into that theme. The stories of Oney Judge, Hercules Posey, and others can be enlightening, even inspiring, for people who recognize them as fellow humans. But champions of trumpery would prefer to suppress that history.