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Time to rid Jefferson Davis name from Montana places | Columnists

Groups petition to remove name of Confederacy leader from Montana sites

Seven groups asked the U.S. Board of Geographic Names on Tuesday to rename three geographic places in Montana now named after Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederated States of America during the Civil War, and change them in honor of Indigenous people and Chinese immigrants. A petition was submitted by the Montana Racial Equity Project, the Montana Human Rights Network, Forward Montana Foundation, Mai Wah Society, The Montana Wilderness Association, The Wilderness Society and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT). Those places include Davis Gulch, just south of Helena’s city limits in Lewis and Clark County, and Jeff Davis Peak and Jeff Davis Creek, located in the southern stretch of the Bitterroot Range.

Montana Landmarks Named For Confederate Leader Under Scrutiny

Listen • 0:57 Multiple groups are petitioning the federal government to rename three Montana geographic features to replace the name of a Confederate Civil War leader to names that honor Montana Native Americans and the Chinese immigrants who built the state s mines. The petition asks the U.S. Board of Geographic Names to rename Montana’s Jeff Davis Peak and Jeff Davis Creek in Beaverhead County and Jeff Davis Gulch in Lewis and Clark County. Jefferson Davis was the president of the Confederated States during the Civil War and a proponent of slavery. The petition is being brought by many groups, including the Montana Racial Equity Project, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, the Montana Human Rights Network, the Forward Montana Foundation, Montana Wilderness Association, the Wilderness Society and the Mai Wah Society, a Butte museum on the history of Asian people in the Rocky Mountains.

MT groups call for landmarks named after the president of the Confederacy to be changed

MT groups call for landmarks named after the president of the Confederacy to be changed By: John Riley and last updated 2021-05-10 21:10:07-04 HELENA — Several Montana landmarks are coming under scrutiny for being named after the man who led southern states against the United States of America during the Civil War. The Montana Racial Equity Project, the Montana Human Rights Network, Forward Montana Foundation, Mai Wah Society, Montana Wilderness Association, The Wilderness Society and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT) jointly submitted a petition to the U.S. Board of Geographic Names asking it to rename three geographic features in Montana currently named after Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States of America.

Metrics or politics?: Biden conservation plan raises questions

30 x 30 = ? The answer to the Biden Administration’s new conservation goal is not “900.” Politics more than math may define what counts toward the plan to conserve 30% of the nation’s land and water resources by 2030. And that has a lot of people wondering what it means for places like the Rocky Mountain West, where the federal government is the biggest landowner. For example, Montana Sen. Jon Tester reintroduced his Blackfoot-Clearwater Stewardship Act last month, which would add 79,000 acres to the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex. But he noted the project has been underway for more than a decade and is not part of Biden’s 30x30 proposal.

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