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Trump administration removes dozens of National Park exhibits that disparage' US

The?U.S. A court-ordered inventory reveals that the National Park Service removed 51 exhibits at 38 sites in order to comply with President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting displays that "inappropriately disparage Americans living or dead". In a filing by the Trump administration on Wednesday, examples were given from a number of national parks and monuments, including Philadelphia's Independence National Historical Park where a display describing George Washington, America's first president, owning enslaved persons, was removed. The list was provided by the administration at the request of Boston-based U.S. district judge Angel Kelley who, on Friday, ruled that the government had engaged in a?unlawful attempt to "rewrite nation's past with a white out pen.

Kelley's decision came after groups representing "national park conservationists" (scientists, scientists and historians) challenged the actions of the administration. They accused the administration for violating laws that govern National Park Service activities.

In a second filing, the administration called the judge's order that it must reinstall exhibits on July 3, the day prior to the country celebrating its 250th anniversary, "herculean" and an "unmanageable task." The administration asked for the order to be halted while it appeals the judge's decision that prevented Interior Secretary Doug Burgum from implementing the Republican President's March directive 2025. Trump's order targeted what he referred to as a "revisionist" movement that painted the United States in a negative light, portraying it as "inherently racism, sexism, oppression or otherwise irredeemably flaw." It directed the Interior Department of making changes to national parks.

Critics claim that Trump has tried to erase parts of American history in order to fit into his false narratives of the country.

Kelley stated that she needed to gather more information in order to assess the extent of the changes made to the exhibit. She ordered the production of a complete list of all items removed.

The spreadsheet included sites such as Fort Sumter, in South Carolina; the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, at the Gateway National Recreation Area, in New York; and Acadia National Park, in Maine.

According to a court ruling on Friday, climate change materials were removed from all three parks. The inventory stated that the items were removed because they did not relate to "beauty abundance and grandeur" of the natural landscape.

In an accompanying court filing, a National Park Service official stated that the inventory is likely only a partial listing and that not all items?identified as being removed have been removed yet.

Kelley was appointed by Trump’s Democratic predecessor Joe Biden. In her ruling, she noted that an anonymous National Park Service database, leaked in March by civil servants, listed "more than 500 items" that were identified for review and possible removal.

As a matter for transparency, the agency stated that it also filed a list of six items that were removed from a third national park in accordance with a different Trump executive order.

The plaintiffs' lawyers did not respond immediately to comments. (Reporting and editing by Will Dunham in Boston, with Nate Raymond reporting from Boston)

(source: Reuters)