Fate of historic slavery exhibit targeted by Trump hangs in the balance
Attorney and tour guide Raina Yancey wants the federal government to fully restore a slavery exhibit taken down months ago at the President's House in Philadelphia. Adrian Florido hide caption President Trump's fight to reshape how American history is told has hit another hurdle
Attorney and tour guide Raina Yancey wants the federal government to fully restore a slavery exhibit taken down months ago at the President's House in Philadelphia. Adrian Florido hide caption
President Trump's fight to reshape how American history is told has hit another hurdle.
Last week, a federal judge temporarily blocked his year-old executive order titled "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History." It ordered the Interior Secretary to remove from national parks and historic sites content that "inappropriately disparages Americans past or living."
Months later, federal employees took crowbars and peeled away an exhibit about nine African-Americans President George Washington had enslaved at the nation's first executive mansion in Philadelphia.
The removal sparked bipartisan condemnation and a separate lengthy legal battle that has wound its way to a federal court of appeals.
Some of the exhibit has since been restored, but a lot is still missing.
Lawyer and activist Michael Coard spent years fighting to create a site telling the stories of the people enslaved by George Washington in Philadelphia. Henry Larson hide caption
Michael Coard is a lawyer and activist who advocated for the exhibit's creation. It opened in 2010.

