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The signs come down — Cavazos erased; Fort Hood’s back, just not that Hood

On Tuesday, Army personnel began removing "Fort Cavazos" from signage at the massive armored infantry post in Central Texas.

Published June 17, 2025 at 6:54pm


The rebranding of Fort Cavazos in Central Texas has begun.

Signs that say "Fort Cavazos" are being taken down. They'll soon be replaced with signs bearing a new-old name: Fort Hood.

President Donald Trump last week ordered the Army to restore the original names of Fort Cavazos and six other Army bases that had been rechristened under the Biden administration to remove the names of Confederate generals.

RELATED: 'American hero': Biden awards Medal of Honor to Gen. Richard E. Cavazos

An act of Congress that took effect in 2021, shortly after Trump's first term as president, forbids naming any U.S. military facility after someone who voluntarily served the Confederacy. In 2023, Fort Hood was renamed for the late Gen. Richard E. Cavazos, a native Texan, a Medal of Honor winner and the nation's first Hispanic four-star general.

The post's original namesake was Confederate Gen. John Bell Hood.

To get around the prohibition on honoring Confederates, the Trump administration says it is renaming the post after a different Hood: a little-known World War I officer, Col. Robert B. Hood, who received a Distinguished Service Cross for heroism.

The fort is the nation's largest armored infantry base and sprawls over 352 square miles. The name Fort Cavazos was to be removed from two of the post's six entry gates on Tuesday: the Bernie Beck gate on T.J. Mills Boulevard and the Santa Fe Gate between T.J. Mills Boulevard and Clear Creek Road.

Also targeted for removal Tuesday was a "Welcome to Fort Cavazos" sign on Sadowski Field, near the headquarters of the 3d Armored Corps.

As to when the remaining signage would be changed, "we don't know the times for sure," said Monty Campbell, a spokesman for the post, located near Killeen.

As "Fort Cavazos" is erased, “we'll repaint and install the Fort Hood lettering on these signs," Campbell said. The repainted signs will be covered until a renaming ceremony is held or the post receives direction from the Army "to unveil those signs," he said.

No date has been set for a formal changeover ceremony.

RELATED: 'Repugnant': Fort Cavazos to become Fort Hood again by order of Trump

Cavazos’ daughter, Laura Blevins, expressed bitter disappointment at the erasure of her father's name.

“They are the most vindictive, hateful and soulless group of people I have ever seen," Blevins, 69, who lives in the Houston area, said of the Trump administration on Facebook. "My father never wanted any recognition and we, his family, were hesitant about the renaming of Fort Hood. But after thinking about it, who would be better than my father. He was a son of Texas, born on the King Ranch, Hispanic, a four-star general and a Medal of Honor winner who loved his country and his men."

Richard Cavazos was known as a master tactician, an innovator and a soldier’s soldier. He received the Medal of Honor for his role in a June 14, 1953, battle in the closing days of the Korean War, when he served as the commander of an infantry company. He led his men, mostly Puerto Ricans who spoke only Spanish, in a raid on the enemy near Sagimak, Korea.

Cavazos' ability to speak Spanish bolstered the unit "after a series of commanders who spoke no Spanish, which resulted in confusion and chaos during battles," according to an account published by the National Museum of the U.S. Army.

Cavazos received the Distinguished Service Cross for his role in the battle.

"Lieutenant Cavazos three times led the company through the heavy barrage in assaults on the enemy position, each time destroying vital enemy equipment and personnel," the commendation stated.

"Exposed to heavy hostile fire, Lieutenant Cavazos located five men who had been wounded in the action. He evacuated them, one at a time, to a point on the reverse slope of the hill from which they could be removed to the safety of the friendly lines."

He accepted medical attention for his wounds only after his soldiers had been rescued.

Cavazos died at age 88 in San Antonio on Oct. 29, 2017. Shortly before leaving office in January, President Joe Biden posthumously awarded him the Medal of Honor during a White House ceremony.

The honor prompted fond recollections from men who served under Cavazos, including Mel "Brave" Brav, then 82, of San Diego, Calif.

"He once told me he would rather use $100,000 worth of artillery and ordinance than have any of his men hurt or killed,” Brav said. “The men he led knew that about him, which encouraged them to prevail."

Among other bases that are being rebranded under Trump's orders, Fort Barfoot in Virginia will revert to Fort Pickett in honor of 1st Lt. Vernon W. Pickett, who received the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism during World War II. Its original namesake was Confederate Gen. George Pickett, known for Pickett's Charge, a disastrous frontal assault on Union troops during the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863.

Fort Eisenhower in Georgia will go back to being Fort Gordon, this time in honor of Master Sgt. Gary I. Gordon, who fought in the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia and was awarded the Medal of Honor. The fort was originally named for Confederate Gen. John Brown Gordon.

Fort Gregg-Adams in Virginia will again be Fort Lee, after Pvt. Fitz Lee, who was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism during the Spanish-American War. It was originally named after Gen. Robert E. Lee, commander of Confederate forces during the Civil War.

Fort Johnson in South Carolina, originally named Fort Polk after Confederate Gen. Leonidas Polk, will revert to that name, but this time in honor of Gen. James H. Polk, who won the Silver Star for his gallantry as a cavalry commander in Europe during World War II.

Fort Novosel in Alabama will be renamed Fort Rucker after Capt. Edward W. Rucker, who won the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism in World War I. It was originally named for Confederate Col. Edmund Rucker.

Fort Walker in Virginia will revert to Fort A.P. Hill, a combination of the names of three Medal of Honor recipients: Lt. Col. Edward Hill, 1st Sgt. Robert A. Pinn and Pvt. Bruce Anderson, all of whom served in the Union Army during the Civil War. The fort's original namesake was Confederate Gen. Ambrose Powell Hill.