I visited the museum ship in Baltimore with my dad a while back.
As a teenaged Coast Guard boatswain striker back in the 1950s, he didn't know or care who Roger B. Taney was. It was simply the name of his ship. As a retired attorney now, he still sees the ship much as he did then: it is simply "the Taney" of his youth. He is of course well aware now of who Roger B. Taney was and the controversial nature of his legacy, but for dad (and for most who visit the museum), the name change actually means little. The museum is a monument not to its namesake but rather to the ship's long service and, most importantly, to the many Coast Guardsmen who served aboard.
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