NPS has removed interpretive signage referencing climate change, slavery, the internment of Japanese Americans, and the massacre of Native Americans from multiple sites around the country (Photo: kellyvandellen/Getty Images)
In recent weeks, the National Park Service (NPS) has removed interpretive signage referencing climate change, slavery, the internment of Japanese Americans, and the massacre of Native Americans from multiple parks and historic sites聽around the country.
The initiative appears to be in response to a sweeping executive order, 鈥,鈥 signed by President Donald Trump in late March, which decried information in national parks that included 鈥渋mproper partisan ideology.鈥 By June, notices began appearing at NPS sites requesting that park visitors report 鈥渁ny signs or other information that are negative about either past or living Americans.鈥
Now, at least a handful of so-called聽鈥渋nterpretive鈥澛爏igns鈥攖hose providing visitors with historical or cultural context鈥攈ave been removed from multiple national park destinations.
Representative Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) told that a sign at Maine鈥檚 Acadia National Park referencing the role of climate change in extreme weather had been removed, as well as 鈥渟ignage suggesting visitors take a shuttle bus to minimize their carbon footprint.鈥
鈥淭his is an outrageous assault on our free speech and ability to educate each other,鈥 she told the publication. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just bonkers to me that the federal government is imposing these kinds of restraints, that we鈥檙e taking away valuable information from our citizens who visit this park, and that we are trying to dumb everyone down and pretend real weather events don鈥檛 happen by not letting you read a simple sign.鈥
Another source, who remained anonymous, told The Washington Post that an 1863 , his back heavily scarred with whip marks, had been removed from Georgia鈥檚 Fort Pulaski National Monument, the site of a key battle during the Civil War. According to聽The Washington Post鈥檚 reporting, at least 30 signs at Harpers Ferry National Historic Park, the site of abolitionist John Brown鈥檚 failed anti-slavery revolt in 1859, had been flagged for removal.
Another piece of signage was reportedly taken down in New York鈥檚 Gateway National Recreation Area. According to the Post, the removed sign read: 鈥淪ome very new parks preserve not just lands or buildings but our nation鈥檚 ideas and ideals. They remind us of things we hope to live up to鈥攍ike women鈥檚 rights and liberty鈥攁nd things we hope never to repeat鈥 like slavery, massacres of Indians, or holding Japanese Americans in wartime camps.鈥
Other lawmakers have pushed back on the removal of the signs. On September 18, California Rep. Jared Huffman a meeting of the House Committee on Natural Resources.
鈥淲hat the hell is going on here? That someone in this administration directed this photo to be removed from a display?鈥 Huffman said of the removal of photos from Fort Pulaski National Monument. 鈥淥ur national parks are not monuments to a single, sanitized version of American greatness. They are places for all of us to confront and learn from the full complexity of our past.鈥
To combat the removals, a collective of librarians, historians, and data experts has organized a project called (SOS). The group is attempting to 鈥渂uild a community archive of the signs, exhibits, and texts that could soon disappear from our national parks.鈥 It encourages park visitors to of interpretive signs from any area administered by the NPS. The SOS team is also maintaining a uploaded thus far, which includes over 10,000 photos as of September 20.