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KENT STATE: May 1-4, 1970
(text written by May 4th Task Force Members revised 4/96)
On April 30th, President Nixon announced on national television that a
massive American-South Vietnamese troop offensive into Cambodia was in
progress. "We take these actions," Nixon said, "not for
the purpose of expanding the war into Cambodia, but for the purpose of
ending the war in Vietnam, and winning the just peace we all
desire."
These were familiar words to a war weary public.
Some felt that this decision was essential for attaining a "just
peace" and sustaining America's credibility in the world. Yet
others, particularly students, believed that this action represented an
escalation of the war and a return to Ex President Johnson's earlier
hopes for a military victory. As the fires from the artillery began to
burn in Cambodia, a raging fire of protest spread across the United
States. At Kent State University, the reaction to Nixon's announcement
was similar to that of other campuses across the nation.
FRIDAY MAY 1, 1970
At noon about 500 students gathered around the
Victory Bell on the Commons, the traditional site for rallies. A group
of history students, who had organized the protest, buried a copy of the
Constitution, which they claimed had been murdered when US troops were
sent into Cambodia without a declaration of war by Congress.
Three hours later, Black United Students held a
rally, which had been scheduled before Nixon had made his announcement.
Some 400 people gathered to hear black students talk about recent
disorders with the Ohio National Guard on their campus. Word spread
quickly that another rally, one to oppose the invasion of Cambodia, was
scheduled for Monday, May 4, at noon. Friday night, one of the first
warm evenings of the spring, several hundred students gathered in
downtown Kent in an area with a number of bars, known as "the
Strip," on North Water Street. A spontaneous anti-war rally began
in the street.
Twice, while the rally was in progress, passing
police cruisers were hit with beer bottles. Afterwards, police stayed
away from the area. Meanwhile, more people were leaving the bars. Many
in the crowd chanted anti-war slogans, and a bonfire was set in the
street. The crowd blocked traffic for about an hour and then moved
toward the center of town. Some members of the crowd began to break
windows. Primarily "political targets" were attacked,
including banks, loan companies, and utility companies.
After being informed of the events, Kent Mayor
Leroy Satrom declared a "state of emergency," and arbitrarily
ordered all of the bars closed. Kent police, along with the mayor, then
confronted the crowd. The riot act was read and police proceeded to
clear the area. People inside the bars were ordered to leave, forcing
hundreds more into the streets. The crowd was herded toward the campus
with tear gas and knight sticks, which was in the opposite direction in
which some of them lived. Fourteen persons, mostly stragglers, were
arrested. About $5000 in damage was done as 43 windows were broken, 28 in
one bank.
SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1970
On the morning of May 2, some KSU students
assisted with the downtown cleanup. Rumors of radical activities were
widespread, and Kent's ROTC building was believed to be the target of
militant students that evening. During the Vietnam War, students on many
college campuses opposed the presence of ROTC and often were successful
in forcing the removal of ROTC from their campuses. A dusk to dawn
curfew was imposed on the city of Kent, and students were restricted to
the campus. At 5 p.m., shortly after assessing the situation, Mayor
Satrom alerted the Ohio National Guard. KSU officials were unaware of
this decision.
Shortly after 8 p.m., about 300 people gathered on the Commons, where a
few anti-war slogans were chanted and a few brief speeches given. An
impromptu march began and participants headed towards the dormitories to
gain strength. Large numbers of people joined the march. The now 2,000
marchers swarmed the hill overlooking the Commons and crossed the Commons.
Then they surrounded the ROTC building, an old wooden World War II
barracks that was scheduled to be demolished. Windows were broken and a
few persons eventually set the building on fire.
Plainclothes police who were standing nearby made no attempt to stop the
students at this point. Firemen arrived on the scene but their actions
were abandoned because some of the crowd attacked the firemen and
slashed their hoses. The blaze quickly died out. The firemen eventually
regained control and the building was ignited again. This time, however,
firemen arrived with massive police protection. Police surrounded the
building and dispersed the students with tear gas. The firemen again got
the fire under control. The crowd then moved to the front of the campus.
The students retreated to the Commons to find the ROTC building
smoldering at both ends. Within minutes, the building was fully ablaze.
The crowd then assembled on the wooded hillside
beside the commons and watched as the building burned. Many shouted
anti- war slogans. In the first two weeks of May, thirty ROTC buildings
would be burned nationwide.
Armed with tear gas and drawn bayonets, the guard
pursued students, protesters, and bystanders alike into dormitories and
other campus buildings. Some stones were thrown and at least one student
was bayoneted. The question of who set the fire that destroyed ROTC
building has never been satisfactorily answered by any investigative
body.
SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1970
May 3 was a relatively quiet day. By now, however,
the campus was fully occupied by Ohio National Guard troops, and armored
personnel carriers were stationed throughout the campus. Although some
students and guardsmen fraternized, the feeling, for the most part, was
one of mutual hostility. That morning, Ohio Governor James Rhodes, who
was running for US Senate, arrived in Kent and along with city
officials, held a news conference. Rhodes, running on a "law and
order" platform, attempted to use this opportunity to garner votes
in the primary election, which was only two days away.
In a highly inflammatory speech, Rhodes claimed
that the demonstrations at Kent were the handiwork of a highly organized
band of revolutionaries who were out to "destroy higher education
in Ohio." These protesters, Rhodes declared, were "the worst
type of people we harbor in America, worse than the brown shirts and the
communist element...we will use whatever force necessary to drive them
out of Kent!" Later that evening, a National Guard commander would
tell his troops that Ohio law gave them the right to shoot if necessary.
This merely caused to heighten the guardsmen's hostility toward students.
Around 8 p.m., a crowd gathered on the Commons
near the Victory Bell. As the group increased in size, Guard officials
announced the immediate enforcement of a new curfew. The crowd refused
to disperse. At 9 p.m. the Ohio Riot act was read. Tear gas was fired
from helicopters hovering overhead, and the Guard dispersed the crowd
from the area.
Students attempted to demonstrate that the curfew
was unnecessary by peacefully marching towards the town, but were met by
guardsmen. Students then staged a spontaneous sit in at the intersection
of East Main and Lincoln Streets and demanded that Mayor Satrom and KSU
president Robert White speak with them about the Guard's presence on
campus. Assured that this demand would be met, the crowd agreed to move
from the street onto the front lawn of campus.
The guard then betrayed the students and announced
that the curfew would go into effect immediately. Helicopters and tear
gas were used to disperse the demonstrators. As the crowd attempted to
escape, some were bayoneted and clubbed by guardsmen.
Students were again pursued and prodded back to
their dormitories. Tear gas inundated the campus, and helicopters with
searchlights hovered overhead all night.
MONDAY, MAY 4, 1970
At 11 a.m., about 200 students gathered on the
Commons. Earlier that morning, state and local officials had met in
Kent. Some officials had assumed that Gov. Rhodes had declared Martial
Law to be in effect but he had not. In fact, martial law was not
officially declared until May 5. Nevertheless, the National Guard
resolved to disperse any assembly.
As noon approached, the size of the crowd
increased to 1,500. Some were merely spectators, while others had
gathered specifically to protest the invasion of Cambodia and the
continued presence of the National Guard on the campus. Upon orders of
Ohio's Assistant Adjutant General Robert Canterbury, an army jeep was
driven in front of the assembled students. The students were told by
means of a bullhorn to disperse immediately. Students responded with
jeers and chants. When the students refused to disperse, Gen. Canterbury
ordered the guardsmen to disperse them. Approximately 116 men, equipped
with loaded M-1 rifles and tear gas, formed a skirmish line towards the
students. Aware of bayonet injuries of the previous evening, students
immediately ran away from the attacking National Guardsmen. Retreating
up Blanket Hill, some students lobbed tear gas canisters back at the
advancing troops, and one straggler was attacked with clubs.
The Guard, after clearing the Commons, marched
over the crest of the hill, firing tear gas and scattering the students
into a wider area. The Guard then continued marching down the hill and
onto a practice football field. For approximately 10 minutes, the guard
stayed in this position. During this time, tear gas canisters were
thrown back and forth from the Guard's position to a small group of
student's n the Prentice Hall parking lot, about 100 yards away. Some
students responded to the guardsmen's attack by throwing stones.
Guardsmen also threw stones at the students. But because of the
distance, most stones from both parties fell far short of their targets.
The vast majority of students, however, were spectators on the veranda
of Taylor Hall. While on the practice field, several members of Troop G,
which would within minutes fire the fatal volley, knelt and aimed their
weapons at the students in the parking lot. Gen. Canterbury concluded
that the crowd had been dispersed and ordered the Guard to march back to
the commons area. Some members of Troop G then huddled briefly. After
reassembling on the field, the Guardsmen seemed to begin to retreat as
they marched back up the hill, retracing their previous steps.
Members of Troop G, while advancing up the hill,
continued to glance back to the parking lot, where the most militant and
vocal students were located. The students assumed the confrontation was
over. Many students began to walk to their next classes. As the guard
reached the crest of the Blanket Hill, near the Pagoda of Taylor Hall,
about a dozen members of Troop G simultaneously turned around 180
degrees, aimed and fired their weapons into the crowd in the Prentice
Hall parking lot. The 1975 civil trials proved that there was a verbal
command to fire.
A total of 67 shots were fired in 13 seconds. Four
students: Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William
Schroeder were killed. Nine students were wounded: Joseph Lewis, John
Cleary, Thomas Grace, Robbie Stamps, Donald Scott MacKenzie, Alan
Canfora, Douglas Wrentmore, James Russell and Dean Kahler. Of the
wounded, 1 was permanently paralyzed, and several were seriously maimed.
All were full time students.
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