Ever since the racially motivated shooting massacre in Charleston last week that took nine lives, calls have grown stronger to remove symbols of the Confederacy from U.S. government property.
South Carolina’s Governor Nikki Haley on Monday called for the state’s legislature to take down the Confederate flag from their Capitol grounds. Alabama Governor Robert Bentley then ordered the flag removed from their state Capitol the next day.
But there’s one often overlooked place where confederate symbolism can be seen—U.S. Army bases. And it appears it may stay that way. MSNBC.com reached out to the Army to ask whether bases named after Confederate generals who fought against the U.S. should be renamed.
“Every Army installation is named for a soldier who holds a place in our military history. Accordingly, these historic names represent individuals, not causes or ideologies,” said U.S. Army Chief of Public Affairs, Brig. General Malcom B. Frost in an exclusive statement to msnbc.com. “It should be noted that the naming occurred in the spirit of reconciliation, not division.”
Of the 18 Army bases across the country named after Civil War generals, eight of them are named after Confederates. They have combined populations of over 600,000, including active-duty soldiers, reservists, family members, contractors and civilian workers.
Naming bases after confederates is not just a cultural issue, it’s actually the official policy of the U.S government.
According to the Army’s website:









