'We are killing them all over again': Critics say history is being erased as Trump reshapes narratives at national parks [View all]
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Source: CNN Politics
Updated May 2, 2026, 6:08 AM ET
PUBLISHED May 2, 2026, 6:00 AM ET
When tourists see a statue of Gustavus Cheyney Doane, a 19th-century explorer, at a Grand Teton National Park visitor center this spring, a marker beneath it that used to be there will now be missing.
It had asked visitors: How do we acknowledge the good and bad of a figure? pointing out that Doanes expedition led to the designation of the first national park but also that he helped lead a massacre of at least 173 members of the Piegan Blackfeet an act he bragged about throughout his life.
Its removal was cited in a lawsuit against the Department of the Interior, which manages the countrys national parks, as one of many changes wrought by President Donald Trumps March 2025 executive order directing the agency to take action against public content that inappropriately disparage Americans past or living.
The Trump administration argues the order ensures that American history is portrayed in a positive light. But critics say it is erasing elements of the nations past. We are killing them all over again, said Tom Rodgers, a member of the Blackfeet Nation who is known as One Who Rides His Horse East, referring to victims of the massacre, which he called one of the most despicable historical experiences for Native Americans.
I think were at a point in our country where people think that if you tell half the truth, youve told all the truth, and that in itself, is a lie, he said. Its Orwellian.
Read more: https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/02/politics/trump-national-parks-sign-removals-backlash