Administration Really Pushing Not to Restore Slavery Exhibit

It's appealing judge's order to reinstate the exhibit at George Washington's home
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Feb 19, 2026 2:30 AM CST
Administration Really Doesn't Want to Restore Slavery Exhibit
Demonstrators gather to protest removal of explanatory panels that were part of an exhibit on slavery at the President's House Site in Philadelphia, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026.   (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

A judge in Philadelphia has set a Friday deadline for the Trump administration to restore an exhibit on the nine people enslaved by George Washington at his former home on Independence Mall. Senior US District Judge Cynthia Rufe issued the deadline Wednesday even as the Justice Department appeals her order to reinstate the exhibit, the AP reports. The administration has argued that it alone can decide what stories are told at National Park Service properties. Park service workers last month abruptly removed exhibits from the Philadelphia site, prompting the city and other supporters of the exhibit to sue.

Rufe on Monday granted an injunction ordering that the materials be restored while the lawsuit proceeds and barring Trump officials from creating new interpretations of the site's history. The administration on Tuesday filed a notice of appeal with the 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals, also based in Philadelphia. Rufe, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, compared President Trump's administration to the totalitarian regime in the dystopian novel 1984, which revised historical records to align with its narrative. She said the federal government does not have the power "to dissemble and disassemble historical truths."

"If the President's House is left dismembered throughout this dispute, so too is the history it recounts," Rufe wrote in the 40-page opinion. "Worse yet, the potential of having the exhibits replaced by an alternative script—a plausible assumption at this time—would be an even more permanent rejection of the site's historical integrity, and irreparable." A day later, an Interior Department spokesperson said it had planned an alternative display "providing a fuller account of the history of slavery at Independence Hall." The historical site is among several where the administration has quietly removed content about the history of enslaved people, LGBTQ+ people, and Native Americans.

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