
Americans divided on history as 250th anniversary nears
Clip: 3/18/2026 | 7m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
Americans divided on nation's history as 250th anniversary nears
Deep divisions over how Americans remember their past are coming into sharper focus as the nation approaches the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Judy Woodruff reports for her series, America at a Crossroads.
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Major corporate funding for the PBS News Hour is provided by BDO, BNSF, Consumer Cellular, American Cruise Lines, and Raymond James. Funding for the PBS NewsHour Weekend is provided by...

Americans divided on history as 250th anniversary nears
Clip: 3/18/2026 | 7m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
Deep divisions over how Americans remember their past are coming into sharper focus as the nation approaches the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Judy Woodruff reports for her series, America at a Crossroads.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipAMNA NAWAZ: Well, deep divisions# over how Americans remember their## past are coming into sharper focus as the# nation approaches its 250th anniversary.
Judy Woodruff reports for her# series America at a Crossroads.
ALAN SPEARS, National Parks Conservation# Association: So this is kind of## like the heart of the Gettysburg# battlefiel.. JUDY WOODRUFF: On the hallowed# grounds of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania,## where in early July 1863 there were# as many as 51,000 American casualties,## the worst of the Civil War, Alan Spears# discovered a story he hadn't known.
ALAN SPEARS: I had to come here, I don't# know, 10, 11, 12 times before I actually## walked past the interpretive marker that# told me about Abraham Brian and his family.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Growing up# in nearby Washington, D.C.,## Spears early on discovered a love of bullets# and bayonets.
But in his 20s, he spotted a## sign that led him to a different story.
This# parcel had once been home to Abraham Brian,## a free African American who fled as Confederate# forces approached ahead of the battle.
ALAN SPEARS: You have got the house# and barn of a free African American.## You have got the 11th Mississippi# Infantry Regiment fighting for the## cause that they believed in using that# house and barn as a guide on point.
Abraham Brian and his family left# here because they were afraid that## they might be captured by Confederate forces# and sent South into slavery.
It's almost the## entire history of America and the American# Civil War just captured in a few acres.
Those were the Confederate# positions on Friday, July 3.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Spears works in cultural affairs# at the National Park Conservation Association,## a nonprofit that advocates for the# parks.
And he worries that this is## exactly the kind of history now at# risk under the Trump administration.
ALAN SPEARS: There are some folks who feel# like, in the name of combating diversity,## equity and inclusion, in the name of fighting# or combating or pushing back against wokeness,## that we have to restore our history# to a point where it simply celebrates## everything that's happened in this country.
And if you have challenging elements of our# history, the forced removal of indigenous## people and tribes, the issue of slavery,# emancipation, the civil rights movement,## those sorts of things, those elements# complicate our national narrative.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Last year, President Trump signed# a flurry of executive orders related to DEI,## including this one, "Restoring Truth# and Sanity to American History."
"Over the past decade," it says, "Americans have## witnessed a concerted and widespread# effort to rewrite our nation's history,## replacing objective facts with a distorted# narrative driven by ideology, rather than truth."
The order directed Interior Secretary Doug Burgum# to -- quote -- "ensure that all public monuments,## memorials, statues and markers focus on the# greatness of the achievements and progress of## the American people and the beauty, abundance# and grandeur of the American landscape."
Burgum ordered a review of sites across the# country and asked visitors to report any## information that may violate Trump's order.
Late# last year, reports of removals began to pop up.
NICHOLE MALLETTE, New York City Resident: We will# not be erased.
We will not go back in the closet.
JUDY WOODRUFF: From LGBTQ history# to climate change to women,## perhaps most visibly at Philadelphia's# Independence National Historical Park,## once home to George Washington# and his wife, Martha.
There, the NPS staff in January removed an## exhibit about nine of the slaves# Washington kept at the property.
KIMBERLY GEGNER, Pennsylvania Resident: We're a# group that's being asked to forget our history,## to forget our past.
And that's# kind of been a hallmark of## our ancestry in this country is to just forget.
STEPHEN NELSON, Philadelphia# Visitor: Every country, every nation,## every part of the world has parts in# their history that they don't like and## that are wrong.
But you can't just take# that out and pretend it didn't happen.
JUDY WOODRUFF: The city of Philadelphia# sued the Department of the Interior and## the Park Service over the removal.
And a judge,# quoting George Orwell's 1984 in her opinion,## ordered the panels returned last month while# the lawsuit makes its way through the courts.
The Department of the Interior didn't respond# to our request for an interview or for comment.
BRENDA HAFERA, The Heritage Foundation: There's# more awareness that we have swung too far,## particularly with DEI initiatives.
And that's# part of why this administration was elected.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Brenda Hafera is a# scholar with The Heritage Foundation,## the conservative think tank in Washington,## where she's heading up the organization's# own review of historical sites across the## country.
She says the Trump administration's# actions are a necessary correction to what## had become systematic bias in favor of DEI# and away from accuracy and proportionality.
BRENDA HAFERA: You can distort things in two ways,## by overemphasizing and disproportionately# focusing on the negative, or you distort## things by whitewashing history.
And# neither of those are acceptable.
JUDY WOODRUFF: She points to Mount Vernon# as an example of a place doing it right.## She gave it A for its inclusion of George# Washington's life, his time as a general,## and as the first president, as well as# for exhibits about the people he enslaved.
She says the Philadelphia exhibit, however,# placed too much emphasis on slavery,## to the exclusion of other important# stories occurring at that place.
BRENDA HAFERA: The nation is just beginning,# and the things that Washington had to face,## the decisions he had to make, how he's laying# out what the executive branch will look like,## because everything he does sets a precedent.# So you could talk about these things.
But according to the city journal, there were# 30 exhibit panels, and 25 of the 30 discussed## race and slavery.
I think it's good that# we're having these public deliberations in## the public square to ask these questions# of what should we become commemorating,## what should these look like,# what is the proper balance?
ALAN SPEARS: I think that there are people# who are overly concerned about balance,## because they're not seeing that we have# had to come from almost nothing to get## to a point where we have a minimum amount# of information available to the public at## these places about race, about labor, about# women's rights, about the LGBTQ experience,## and these things that are important,# equally important, in American history.
Fighting has gone from being long-range,## being hit by artillery as soon as# they came out from those trees.
JUDY WOODRUFF: Back at Gettysburg,# Alan Spears says the National Park## Service spends years working on exhibits# and public information at these sites,## enlisting experts from across# disciplines to make careful decisions.
ALAN SPEARS: What we have seen in the last 13## months is an administration that is# willing to come in and say, well,## we don't really study history necessarily.# We just think that sounds wrong.
We think it## complicates the story.
We think it denigrates# Americans, and so we're going to take it out.
And so it's that arbitrary and# capricious nature of the way## these decisions are being made and the total# lack of transparency that really bothers us.
JUDY WOODRUFF: His organization has joined# other scientific and preservation groups in a## lawsuit against the Department of the Interior,# arguing that the removals violate federal law.
BRENDA HAFERA: I think any truthful# commemoration of the American story## will be celebratory, because# that's accurate, because this## is a good country that has contributed a# lot and has moved towards human freedom.
JUDY WOODRUFF: It's all a reminder that,## as we approach 250, this debate over# our past will continue into our future.
For the "PBS News Hour," I'm Judy# Woodruff in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
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