National Park Service yanks slavery signs from Philly site

Historic slavery signs vanished, Philly sued fast, and politicians piled on after federal crews yanked uncomfortable history from the President’s House.

What got pulled and where
  • Crews stripped slavery-focused panels from the President’s House site in Old City, Philadelphia.
  • The outdoor setup sits at Sixth and Market streets.
  • The location once housed George Washington and John Adams.
Why are people furious
  • Activists fought years back to center enslaved people forced to work there.
  • The exhibit became a rare federal acknowledgment of slavery tied to presidential power.
  • Preservation advocates clocked the move as deliberate, not accidental.
Who pulled the trigger
  • National Park Service teams physically removed the panels.
  • The city says federal officials skipped consent and skipped discussion.
  • A federal lawsuit demands the signs go back immediately.
Political blowback hits fast
  • Josh Shapiro blasted history scrubbing on social media.
  • Brendan Boyle called the removal unacceptable.
  • Kenyatta Johnson warned that discomfort does not erase facts.
The bigger federal backdrop
  • Donald Trump signed an order targeting divisive historical narratives.
  • The order flags Independence National Historical Park by name.
  • Doug Burgum must finish revisions before July 4, 2026.
 

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