Policy
US National Parks accused of erasing Black history under Trump administration
Published July 2, 2026
The Trump administration stands accused of launching a coordinated campaign to rewrite American history by removing references to slavery and Black historical figures from signage at US National Parks. Critics describe this as a deliberate attempt to sanitise the nation's past, with particular concern over sites like Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, where the contributions of enslaved people have long been underrepresented in official narratives.
The article centres on the personal testimony of Jerry Bransford, a former National Park Service ranger, whose great-great-grandfather Materson 'Mat' Bransford was rented out by enslavers for $100 a year to explore what would become Mammoth Cave national park. Despite his crucial role in mapping the cave system and establishing it as a tourist attraction, Mat Bransford was never paid for his labour, and now his descendants fear his story—and those of countless other Black Americans—will be erased from public lands entirely.
This alleged censorship raises profound questions about how nations choose to educate the public about difficult historical truths and whose stories are deemed worthy of preservation. While the policy affects US federal lands, it serves as a stark reminder of why accurate, inclusive historical education matters across all contexts, and how easily marginalised voices can be silenced without vigilance from educators, policymakers, and local communities.
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