Portrait
of Confederate General Robert E. Lee with Slave Rehung at West Point
A view of the United States Military Academy at West
Point, N.Y., May 2, 2019. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)
Posted: August 30, 2025 --- Military.com | By Rebecca
Kheel
Published August 29, 2025, at 2:25pm
ET
A portrait of Confederate General Robert E. Lee in his Confederate uniform with a slave guiding his horse will be rehung in West Point’s library, the Army confirmed to Military.com. The reinstallation, which was 1st reported by The New York Times, marks the latest effort by the Trump administration to reverse the work of a congressionally mandated commission charged with scrubbing tributes to the Confederacy from the military.
In a brief email Friday, an Army spokesperson confirmed to Military.com that the Times report was accurate. West Point did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while the Pentagon deferred to the Army. The portrait that was removed and now being reinstalled was 1st hung in 1952 during a high point for the Lost Cause movement that seeks to recast the Confederacy’s fight as a heroic struggle unrelated to slavery. Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth previously announced they were restoring the names of 9 Army bases that were named after Confederate military leaders and reinstalling a Confederate memorial at Arlington National Cemetery.
The pair have argued they are simply respecting history
that was being erased by "woke lemmings” – as Hegseth phrased it in a social
media post about the decision to restore the Arlington monument. In reality,
the bases were renamed, the memorial was removed and the Lee portrait was put
into storage at the direction of what was known as the Naming Commission.
Congress created the commission in 2020, overriding a veto Trump issued during his 1st term, to examine how to remove Confederate names, statues and other tributes from military property. The law also mandated that the Pentagon implement the commission’s recommendations. Lawmakers in both parties advocated for creating the commission amid a national reckoning over the legacy of slavery after widespread racial justice protests in summer 2020 in response to the police killing of George Floyd.
The U.S. military, lawmakers argued, should not be
honoring traitors who fought against the United States in order to preserve
slavery, and it was long past time to correct that mistake. When the Trump
administration restored the Confederate names to the Army bases earlier this
year, it skirted the law by choosing different namesakes who have the same last
names as the Confederate military leaders.
Lawmakers in both parties were irked by the use of a
legal loophole and added an amendment to this year’s defense policy bill seeking to force the administration to
follow the law. Officials have not articulated any similar workaround for
reinstalling the Lee portrait without running afoul of the law.
Lee has a deep history with West Point that complicated
the commission’s work there. He was a cadet at the academy, graduating 2ndin his class in 1829, and returned to serve as its superintendent from 1852 to
1855, prior to the Civil War. But, as the commission noted in its final report,
Lee actively turned down a command post in the Army at the start of the Civil
War and chose to fight instead for the Confederacy.
"The consequences of his decisions were
wide-ranging and destructive. Lee’s armies were responsible for the deaths of
more United States soldiers than practically any other enemy in our nation’s
history,” the commission wrote in
its report. Ultimately, the commission decided to take a nuanced approach to
Lee’s presence on campus.
Portraits of Lee in his Army uniform and references solely to his time as superintendent were allowed to stay, but the commission unanimously recommended removing the portrait of him in the Confederate uniform. It also recommended changing the names of several buildings and streets named after Lee. "The commissioners do not make these recommendations with any intention of ‘erasing history,’” the commission’s report said.
"The facts of the past remain, and the commissioners are confident the history of the Civil War will continue to be taught at all service academies with all the quality and complex detail our national past deserves. Rather, they make these recommendations to affirm West Point’s long tradition of educating future generations of America’s military leaders to represent the best of our national ideals.”
Our programs support our service members while they are on the front line, as they are being discharged and long after they return. Your tax-deductible donation will be immediately directed to the VFW programs where your support is most urgently needed.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Carol Whitmore of Des Moines, Iowa, was elected today as the new national commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wa...