Fort Bragg Getting New Name From This List of 87 Options
We now know the potential new name that Fort Bragg could get in the coming years, as The Naming Commission has released its list of 87 possible names for the…

Fort Bragg will have a new name – Fort Liberty – no mater than January 1, 2024.
Photo by Logan Mock-Bunting/Getty ImagesWe now know the potential new name that Fort Bragg could get in the coming years, as The Naming Commission has released its list of 87 possible names for the nine Army installations set to be renamed.
The Naming Commission is the group of individuals that Congress tasked with coming up with a plan for renaming all of the military installations that commemorate the Confederacy. Those nine bases: Fort Hood, Texas; Fort Bragg, NC; Fort Rucker, Alabama; Fort Polk, Louisiana; Fort Benning, Georgia; Fort Gordon, Georgia; Fort A.P. Hill, Virginia; Fort Lee, Virginia; and Fort Pickett, Virginia.
After listening sessions at each installation, and additional public feedback, The Commission got more than 34,000 submissions, including 3,670 unique names. Internal commission discussions narrowed that pool down to the list below. The large majority of the names are legendary American icons, like Dwight Eisenhower, George Marshall, Audie Murphy, Harriet Tubman and a whole host of Medal of Honor recipients.
"It's important that the names we recommend for these installations appropriately reflect the courage, values and sacrifices of our diverse military men and women," said retired Navy Adm. Michelle Howard, the chair of the Naming Commission. "We also are considering the local and regional significance of names and their potential to inspire and motivate our service members."
The Commission is set to deliver a report to Congress later this year that outlines all the costs associated with a name change, as well as the ways it all needs to happen. The plan is currently required to be implemented around the beginning of 2024 at the earliest.
"Following upcoming engagements with installation leaders, personnel and their counterparts in local communities to discuss the names, the Commission will select the final names for recommendation in the naming plan due to Congress by Oct. 1, 2022."
So here's all the names they've put together. It's likely one of these will be the new name of Fort Bragg eventually.
John Aiso
More on John Aiso here.
Alexander Augusta
More on Alexander Augusta here.
Vernon Baker
More on Vernon Baker here.
Van Barfoot
More on Van Barfoot here.
Powhatan Beaty
More on Powhatan Beaty here.
Roy Benavidez
More on Roy Benavidez here.
Omar Bradley

General Omar Bradley (1893 - 1981, left) of the US Army tours Paris in France after the liberation of the city during World War II, 28th August 1944. (Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
More on Omar Bradley here.
Ruby Bradley
More on Omar Bradley here.
William Bryant
More on William Bryant here.
Jose Calugas
More on Jose Calugas here.
William Carney
More on William Carney here.
Alwyn Cashe

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 16: Tamara Cashe (L), widow of the late Sgt. 1st Class Alwyn Cashe, accepts the Medal of Honor on his behalf from U.S. President Joe Biden during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House December 16, 2021 in Washington, DC. Sgt. Cashe died when his vehicle hit an improvised explosive device during a night patrol on Oct. 17, 2005, near Samarra, Iraq. He rescued six soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter from the burning vehicle while the enemy was shooting at the unit. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
More on Alwyn Cashe here.
Richard Cavazos
More on Richard Cavazos here.
Cornelius Charlton
More on Cornelius Charlton here.
Charles Chibitty
More on Charles Chibitty here.
Ernest Childers
More on Ernest Childers here.
Mary Clarke
More on Mary Clarke here.
Mitchell Red Cloud
More on Mitchell Red Cloud Jr. here.
Harold Cohen
More on Harold Cohen here.
Felix Conde-Falcón
More on Felix Conde-Falcón here.
Courage
This one is fairly obvious.
Bruce Crandall & Ed Freeman

WASHINGTON - FEBRUARY 26: U.S. President George W. Bush (R) presents the Medal of Honor to Army Lieutenant Colonel Bruce Crandall (Ret.) (C) as Crandall's wife Arlene (L) looks on during a ceremony at the East Room of the White House February 26, 2007 in Washington, DC. Crandall was awarded with the medal for his brave actions during the Battle of Ia Drang Valley in the Vietnam war. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
More on Bruce Crandall here and Ed Freeman here.
Benjamin Davis, Sr.
More on Benjamin Davis, Sr. here.
Ernest Dervishian
More on Ernest Dervishian here.
Desmond Doss
More on Desmond Doss here.
Charity Earley
More on Charity Earley here.
Dwight Eisenhower

9th July 1942: Newly-promoted Lieutenant-General Dwight D Eisenhower (1890 - 1969), supreme commander of the Allied forces in Europe, and later 34th President of the United States of America. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)
More on President Eisenhower here.
Marcario García
More on Marcario García here.
James Gavin
More on James Gavin here.
Eduardo Gomez
More on Eduardo C. Gomez here.
Gary Gordon & Randall Shughart
More on Gary Gordon here and Randy Shughart here. (Black Hawk Down duo)
Arthur Gregg
More on Arthur Gregg here.
Barney Hajiro
More on Barney Hajiro here.
Kimberly Hampton
More on Kimberly Hampton here. (Currently has a school at Fort Bragg named after her.)
Anna Hays
More on Anna Mae Hays here.
Rodolfo Hernández
More on Rodolfo Hernández here.
Robert Howard

CHICAGO - SEPTEMBER 15: Vietnam veteran and Congressional Medal of Honor recipient Robert Howard chats with other Medal of Honor recipients prior to the opening ceremony for the Medal of Honor Society Convention September 15, 2009 in Chicago, Illinois. The Medal of Honor is the highest military honor awarded for bravery on the battlefield. There are currently 95 living Medal of Honor Recipients. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Lawrence Joel
More on Lawrence Joel here.
Henry Johnson
More on Henry Johnson here.
Hazel Johnson-Brown
More on Hazel Johnson-Brown here.
Charles Kelly
More on Charles Kelly here.
Mildred Kelly
More on Mildred Kelly here.
Charles Kettles
More on Charles Kettles here.
Milton Lee
More on Milton A. Lee here.
José López
More on Jose M. Lopez here.
John Magrath
More on John Magrath here.
George Marshall
More on George Marshall here.
Frank Merrill
More on Frank Merrill here.
Jimmie Monteith
More on Jimmie Monteith here.
Hal & Julia Moore

Actor Mel Gibson and Lutenant General Hal Moore arrive at the premiere of the movie "We Were Soldiers" February 25, 2002 in Westwood, CA. (Photo by J. Emilio Flores/Getty Images)
More on Hal and Julia Moore here. (Made famous in "We Were Soldiers")
Sadao Munemori
More on Sadao Munemori here.
Audie Murphy

June 1945: Lieutenant Audie L Murphy (1924 - 1971) after being presented with the US Congressional Medal of Honour and the Legion Of Merit. He won every medal of valour that the United States had to offer by 20 years of age and went on to become an actor mainly in low budget cowboy movies. (Photo by Horace Abrahams/Keystone/Getty Images)
More on Audie Murphy here.
Michael Novosel, Sr.
More on Michael J. Novosel here.
Elsie Ott
More on Elsie Ott here.
John Page
More on John Page here.
Emmett Paige, Jr.
More on Emmett Paige Jr. here.
Frank Peregory
More on Frank Peregory here.
Emily Perez
More on Emily Perez here.
Pascal Poolaw
More on Pascal Poolaw here.
Colin Powell

Former Gen. Colin Powell (Ret.) onstage at A Capitol Fourth concert at the U.S. Capitol, West Lawn, on July 4, 2016 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Capital Concerts)
More on Colin Powell here.
Ralph Puckett
More on Ralph Puckett here.
Matthew Ridgway
More on Matthew Ridgway here.
Ruben Rivers
More on Ruben Rivers here.
Roscoe Robinson, Jr.
More on Roscoe Robinson Jr here.
Tibor Rubin

U.S. President George W. Bush (R) and Corporal Tibor Rubin pause in a moment of silence during a Medal of Honor ceremony in the East Room of the White House September 23, 2005 in Washington DC. Rubin, a Holocaust survivor born in Hungry, served in the U.S. Army and served in the Korean War received the Nation?s highest honor for his courageous actions during the war. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
More on Tibor Rubin here.
James Rudder
More on James Rudder here.
Alejandro Ruiz
More on Alejandro R. Ruiz here.
Benjamin Salomon
More on Benjamin Solomon here.
Ruppert Sargent
More on Ruppert Sargent here.
Paul Smith
More on Paul Ray Smith here.
Donn Starry
More on Donn Starry here.
Freddie Stowers
More on Freddie Stowers here.
Jon Swanson
More on Jon Swanson here.
Central Texas
This one feels fairly safe to not be the future name of Fort Bragg.
Charles Thomas
More on Charles Thomas here.
Hugh Thompson, Jr.
More on Hugh Thompson, Jr. here.
Harriet Tubman

A recently-found photograph of escaped slave, abolitionist and Union spy Harriet Tubman that was acquired by the Smithsonian is displayed before a hearing of the House Administration Committee in the Longworth House Office Building on Capitol Hill June 17, 2015 in Washington, DC. Auburn, New York, photographer H. Seymour Squyer made the photograph around 1885. Born into slavery, Tubman used a network of antislavery activists and safe houses known at the Underground Railroad to help lead about 13 missions to rescue about 70 enslaved family and friends. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
More on Harriet Tubman here.
Humbert Versace
More on Humbert Versace here.
John Vessey, Jr.
More on John Vessey, Jr. here.
Francis Wai
More on Francis B. Wai here.
Mary Walker
More on Mary Edwards Walker here.
George Watson
More on George Watson here.
Homer Wise
More on Homer Wise here.
Rodney Yano
More on Rodney Yano here.
Alvin York
More on Alvin York here.
Charles Young
More on Charles Young here.
Rodger Young
More on Rodger Young here.