WASHINGTON β A panel on memorials at the U.S. Naval Academy will discuss whether two buildings on the campus grounds should remain named after two American naval officers who fought for the Confederacy, the academyβs superintendent said Monday.
Vice Adm. Ted Carter, who briefed the academyβs Board of Visitors about the building names at a meeting at the Library of Congress, said the academyβs Memorial Oversight Committee will be looking into the issue, which has been raised in the aftermath of a white-nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, that erupted into deadly violence.
βWhere we are right now, there is not a move to make an immediate change, but there is ongoing dialogue,β Carter told The Associated Press in an interview during a break at the meeting.
The superintendentβs residence in Annapolis, Maryland, is named after Franklin Buchanan, the academyβs first superintendent who left to join the Confederate Navy at the outbreak of the Civil War. A road by the house, which hosts thousands of visitors every year, also is named after him. Maury Hall is named after Matthew Fontaine Maury, a leader in the fields of naval meteorology and navigation. He headed the coast, harbor and river defenses for the Confederate Navy.
Carter told the Board of Visitors, which includes members of Congress, that the buildings were named after the two men because of their links to Navy history and their accomplishments, separate from their service in the Confederacy. He also noted that Maury was opposed to slavery. Buchanan, Carter said, turned in his commission when he believed his home state of Maryland would secede from the union. When it didnβt, he sought to return, but the secretary of the Navy at the time rejected the request.
Carter said he has not been getting encouragement to change the names.
βThe other thing is, thereβs nobody clamoring within the campus nor our alumni, or anyone else, to effect a change, so I listen to those voices as well,β Carter said. βAnd nor are the midshipmen looking for a change, so these are all parts of the conversation that we are now being open to listen to.β















