Trump signs bill giving U.S. park status to Carter sites in Plains, Ga.

ATLANTA — President Donald Trump has signed the bill that will upgrade the status of locales in Plains tied to former President Jimmy Carter. What was formerly called the Jimmy Carter National Historic Site is now the Jimmy Carter National Historical Park.

The park will include the farm where Carter grew up, the train depot that once was headquarters for his presidential campaign, his former high school and the city center. After Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, die, their home and burial sites will also be included in the park. They are 96 and 93, respectively.

U.S. Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga., the bill’s sponsor, said previously that making the Plains sites a national park was needed to ensure they receive the resources and security protections they need for future generations of visitors.

“President Carter has spent his life making Plains, Ga., and America a better place for all, and it is fitting that we honor him with this change,” Bishop said in December, shortly after both chambers in Congress signed off on the legislation.

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