President Trump was so determined to reverse his predecessor’s legacy that he asked Alaska’s two senators if he should change the name of the US’ largest mountain back to Mt. McKinley from the Native American name it had been called for 10,000 years.

The Obama administration had changed the name to Denali — its name in the indigenous Athabascan language — in recognition of Native Americans’ heritage as the original residents of North America.

But in a meeting in the Oval Office in March with GOP Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, Trump asked them about changing the name back, the Alaska Dispatch News reported.

“He looked at me and said, ‘I heard that the big mountain in Alaska also had — also its name was changed by executive action. Do you want us to reverse that?’” Sullivan said.

He said he and Murkowski “jumped over the desk, we said, ‘No! No! Don’t want to reverse that,'” Sullivan added.

He told the president that Denali was the name given to the mountain by the Athabascan people more than 100 centuries ago — and that his wife was Athabascan.

“You change that name back now, she’s going to be really, really mad,” he said he told the president.

“So he’s like, ‘All right, we won’t do that,’” Sullivan said.

Obama issued an executive order in 2015 renaming Mt. McKinley — which was named by a gold prospector in honor of future President William McKinley of Ohio in 1896 — to Denali.

On the campaign trail, Trump slammed the move on Twitter.

“President Obama wants to change the name of Mt. McKinley to Denali after more than 100 years,” Trump tweeted. “Great insult to Ohio. I will change back!”