Alaska's Republican U.S. senators have introduced legislation seeking to designate North America's tallest peak as Denali.
The legislation comes after President Donald Trump ordered last month for the name to be changed back to Mount McKinley.
reads the caption accompanying the post. A stock image shows Alaska's Denali, North America's tallest mountain. A stock image shows Alaska's Denali, North America's tallest mountain. iStock ...
The Alaska House on Monday voted to urge President Donald Trump to reverse course and retain the name of North America's tallest peak as Denali. The vote came a week after Trump, on his first day ...
A pro-Trump Republican who represents the state House district that includes Denali is now backing a resolution asking Trump to keep the peak’s name intact. Rep. Kevin McCabe, R-Big Lake ...
The mountain had been named for former President William McKinley — who never visited Alaska — until in 2015 the name was formally changed to Denali by executive order from former President Barack ...
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Story continues below this ad The indigenous Koyukon people, who lived in the valleys of the Koyukuk and Yukon rivers, called the peak Denali in their Athabascan language. Between the 1730s and 1890s, ...
The order kicked off the latest chapter in a long struggle over what Alaska’s most prominent peak should be called — and why. At 20,310 feet tall, Denali is visible for hundreds of miles around.
The Obama administration officially renamed the peak to Denali in 2015. Alaska’s U.S. senators, Republicans Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, have spoken out against renaming the mountain.