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May 14, 2018

The Vietnam War Reaches Kent State University in a Matter of 13 Seconds

Alison Krause, 19; William Schroeder, 19; Jeffrey Miller, 20; and Sandra Scheuer, 20. These four individuals come from different backgrounds, but they share the same piercing story. What is it that binds them together? Could it be their age? Could it be that they each attended the same university? Or maybe they shared the last day of their life together?

During the latter half of 1960s, anti-war rallies were common in the United States; most of them were led by college activists. A reason for this was their opposition to the Vietnam War, and particularly to the draft lottery of 1969, which targeted young men between the ages of nineteen and twenty-five. Students united to fight for one common cause and that was to stay out of the Vietnam War. Many individuals were angered by President Nixon’s decision to continue the United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War, which led to a great number of student protests and anti-war rallies nationwide. A variety of protest took place in Kent, Ohio during a four-day event in 1970. There was a buildup of anger, violence, and social upheaval, until finally the ticking bomb detonated and four individuals lost their lives. On May 4, 1970, the life they once had had left their bodies by the penetration of a single bullet. This tragedy divided the nation even more. But what exactly led the Kent State University shooting?

During the 1968 presidential election, Republican nominee Richard Nixon won the presidency. One of his main campaign promises was that he would end the Vietnam War. Nixon started to keep his promise, as the United States’ troop commitment stopped increasing; but on April 28, 1970, he broke his promise by sending U.S. military forces to invade Cambodia. This was known as the Cambodia Incursion; the purpose of the invasion was to attack the Viet Cong. The Viet Cong were a group of North Vietnamese communists who had been seizing the Cambodian territory as a sanctuary.1 The news of the invasion was announced to the American public on April 30, when the president addressed his plan through television and the radio. The news of the invasion did not sit well with the public, and many became infuriated by the news. Public opinion was divided by those who agreed with the president and those who wanted to get out of the Vietnam War.

Former President Richard Nixon Announcing the Cambodian Attack | Courtesy of WETA

The following day, on May 1, 1970, protests begin at Kent State University. The rally was held on the school’s commons by a group known as the World History Opposed to Racism and Exploitation (WHORE). The commons was a field located at the center of Kent State, which was popular for rallies and campus meetings among the students. WHORE, along with the New University Conference, sponsored the anti-war rally. The event transpiring at this time was not violent in any way, but was rather calm. About 500 demonstrators attended to protests the Cambodian Incursion. Nonetheless, a group of “rally leaders buried a copy of the United States Constitution, declaring that it had been ‘murdered’ when troops had been sent into Cambodia without a declaration of war or consultation with Congress.”2 As the rally was coming to an end, a new protest was planned for May 4 at the university’s commons.

However, the May 1 protests was not completely over yet, as many students began assembling in downtown Kent at the North Water Street Bar, which consisted of six bars. It was a well-known place for students because the “sale of 3.2 beer to person 18 or older, and of liquor to 21 year olds” was legal in Kent.3 Protesting started off rather peaceful; then things turned violent when demonstrators started to taunt police officers and began throwing beer bottles at their vehicles. The mayor of Kent, Leroy M. Satrom, was made aware of what was happening in the late hours, so he ordered all bars to be closed. This only angered the mob more. Protesters vandalized businesses, breaking windows and even stealing store goods. A discussion of Cambodia turned into a riot when protesters then began igniting a bonfire on the road, making it difficult for vehicles to get around.4 Around 2:00 AM deputies were able to clear the crowd around downtown Kent by using tear gas and moving most of them back to Kent State campus.5

ROTC Building Burned by Protesters | Courtesy of CNN Online

The second wave of protests in Kent started to become excessively violent; rallies turned into riots and threats persisted across the city. On May 2, Mayor Leroy asked Ohio governor James Rhodes for assistance in sending the Ohio National Guard to Kent. The National Guard was supposed to arrive at Kent during the afternoon but did not arrive until 10:00 PM. This was because the Ohio National Guard was stationed in Northeast Ohio. However, a civil emergency was declared for Kent and a curfew was implemented from 8:00 PM until 6:00 AM.6 In Kent State the supposed curfew was ignored, as damage was occurring when a group of individuals burned down the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) building. “A large crowd of over five hundred protesters gathered around the burning building to cheer; the crowd slashed the firefighters’ hoses, temporarily preventing them from extinguishing the blaze.”7 The demonstrators fought against the guardsmen and once again tear gas was used to disperse the crowd. It was the second day of protest in Kent, Ohio, and rallies were becoming increasingly violent as the hours went by. The city was becoming a war zone between anti-war protesters and the Ohio National Guard.

Richard Nixon was sworn in as the 37th president of the United States of America in 1969. Richard Nixon was a prominent and successful president in foreign affairs. He was “something of a closet intellectual who read widely and thought deeply about history and diplomacy.8 One of his promises during his first term as president was that he would be the president to end the Vietnam War once and for all; he would “relieve the anti-war and anti-draft pressure at home” by adopting Vietnamization. But regardless of his approach to end the Vietnam War, he increased turmoil by secretly bombing Cambodia, which would decrease communist control, but it only made matters worse. In a way, he believed, he was far greater and more powerful than Congress: “Nixon wanted to demonstrate to his ‘enemies’ that he could operate a secret diplomacy just as they did, and that he would not be pushed around by anti-war mobs in the streets, Congress, and his special enemy, the media.” With his invasion in Cambodia, he created the “greatest violence and instability in history on American campuses, including the killing of four students by National Guardsmen at Kent State University in May 1970 and strong opposition in the Democratic-controlled Congress.”9 So, now did the president have blood on his hands because he went against telling Congress and the American people about the Cambodia invasion? Not only did he cause great distress within the nation, but during his second term as president he was guilty of covering up the break in to the Democratic National Committee headquarters, which became the scandal that brought down his presidency, known as the Watergate Scandal. Richard Nixon was forced to resign as the thirty-eight president of the United States.

The Vietnam War caused great distress to American soldiers and American civilians seeing the destruction of the war. Many wanted to stay out of Vietnam, but the President had other ideas. Vietnamization was the term first used by the Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird to describe Richard Nixon’s plan for the Vietnam War. “Vietnamization entailed the progressive withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam combined with efforts to enhance the training and modernization of all South Vietnamese military forces to enable the government of South Vietnam to assume greater responsibility for the conduct of the war.”10 This meant that the United States was slowly withdrawing troops from the war and giving complete responsibility and control to the Vietnamese. By 1970, 150,000 American forces had been withdrawn from Vietnam. However, although this might have worked in many aspects, “Nixon’s plan to Vietnamize the war actually increased the number of American casualties. The American public was traumatized by media coverage of the death and destruction.”11

The Most Famous Image of The Kent State Shooting, Mary Ann Vecchio, a 14 year old Runaway Over the Body of One of the Victims; Jeffrey Miller | Courtesy of Slate Magazine

The protests continued at Kent State University, it was now the third day in a row that students and anti-war activists were protesting the United States involvement in the Vietnam War. Around Kent State University, guardsmen surrounded the campus. “Nearly 1,000 Ohio National Guardsmen occupied the campus, making it appear like a military war zone.”12 Governor Rhode was irritated with the events that had been transpiring, so, on Sunday morning he held a press conference, where he voiced a harsh statement against the protesters. He stated that these protests were the “most vicious form of campus-orientated violence” he had witnessed and that he would provide everything in his power to have all forms of authority regulate Kent, Ohio; he continued by calling them the worst type of people that harbor America. He said, “We are going to eradicate the problem…we are not going to treat the symptoms.”13

However, this did not stop the rallies; it only worsened an already violent atmosphere. Throughout the day, confrontations between the people and the guards continued. “Rocks, tear gas, and arrests characterized a tense campus.”14 Following the press conference, 12,000 leaflets were distributed throughout the public. The leaflets listed “curfew hours; said the governor through the National Guard had assumed legal control of the campus; stated that all outdoor demonstrations and rallies, peaceful or otherwise, were prohibited by the state of emergency; and said that the Guard was empowered to make arrests.”15 With these leaflets and the governor’s press conference, many believed that the worse was finally over, but they were wrong. The worst was still on its way. School property, such as windows, were destroyed and quite a few arrests were made that night. The guardsmen were becoming highly outraged because of the protesters unwillingness to cooperate; therefore, a curfew was put in place.16 The following day, May 4, the last day of the violent protests, was about to bring an unexpected end.

“Student movements have the potential to generate major social change in the context of underlying economic, demographic, and other social forces. This makes student movements a strategic factor in assessing the nature of some consequential social change developments in society.”17 The United States had experienced many types of social change. One such movement was triggered by the 1954 Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education; another was triggered by the 1960 Greensboro sit-ins, and another by the 1964 Freedom Summer, all civil rights movements for African Americans for the goal of equality and respectability. However, many of the civil rights movements all had one thing in common, and that was to bring about change. The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee, the Red Power Movement, the Chicano Movement, and the Anti-War Movement were some of the many movements that fought for change; all involving mass protests demanding equality, fighting against racism and police brutality, and fighting for improved labor conditions. These movements later inspired other movements for change, such as the environmentalism of the 1970s, women’s rights and the gay rights movements to name the most prevalent. There were thousands of student protests in the United States in the late 60s and early 70s, many going unnoticed, others gaining the attention of the nation. Whatever the cause, student protests “in their manifestos and calls for nonviolent cultural revolution, democratic reform, unity with the oppressed, or violent revolution, students worldwide called into question the system, that is, the entire ordering of modern society. The protests were often as much a celebration of youth as efforts directed at sharply defined goals.”18

The freedom to shift and bring attention to a cause by organizing student protests, strikes, or boycotting has become familiar in the United States; as many students began to realize their potential for bringing change to the nation, and all they had to do was speak up and become a part of something greater. An example of this is the most recent school shooting that occurred in Parkland, Florida in 2018. High School students around the nation participated in a school walkout for seventeen minutes to honor the seventeen lives lost at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. The attention these students received was taken to bring change to America. Their purpose was not to allow themselves to become just another statistic; they didn’t want this to become just another mass shooting in America, where people would soon forget and move on. They sought to use this opportunity for the young people to spark a change that would make a difference. This led students, activists, believers, parents, teachers, supporters to Washington, D.C. to plea for stricter gun laws. This movement has become known as the March for Our Lives, and its objective is to create regulations for gun owners; not take away their protection, but have better universal background checks and raise the age of gun purchases to 21 rather than 18. Their goal is to stop other students from experiencing the horror that they had to live through on February 14, 2018; and to cease another parents suffering from losing their loved ones to yet another shooting massacre.

On the last day of the anti-war rallies, students were prohibited by University officials from protesting at the school’s Commons. However, by noon there was already a large crowd of protesters. “About 500 core demonstrators were gathered around the Victory Bell at one end of the Commons, another 1,000 people were ‘cheerleaders’ supporting the active demonstrators, and an additional 1,500 people were spectators standing around the perimeter of the Commons. Across the Commons at the burned-out ROTC building stood about 100 Ohio National Guardsmen carrying lethal M-1 military rifles.”19 The night before, the Ohio National Guard had had at least three hours of sleep. Therefore, many were hoping for the protests to not take place. The rally, however, was quite peaceful at the beginning. It is not clear if this rally was to protest the National Guard stationed at the university or the Cambodian invasion. Either way, there was a record attendance. Harold E. Rice was a Kent State officer who ordered students to move away from the Commons. Students responded by using profanity against the guards, taunting them with “Pigs off campus,” and started to throw rocks at them. Guards begin throwing tear gas canisters at the crowds, causing many to leave the premises; but others threw the canisters back to the guards. “Some among the crowd came to regard the situation as a game—’a tennis match’ one called it—and cheered each exchange of tear gas canisters.” Guardsmen begin advancing towards the students to clear the Commons. As the students moved away, they headed towards Blanket Hill on the university grounds. The Guardsmen headed straight towards an enclosed practice field. The guards tried to make their way back to Blanket Hill, but some felt fearful for their lives.20 Although there were numerous aggressive individuals, many were only bystanders. It is not clear why one guardsman fired his pistol, but soon other troops begin to fire into the air, on the ground, and into the crowd. In a matter of thirteen seconds, between 61 and 67 shots were fired. 21 Four students were killed and nine were injured. Two were protesters and the other two where bystanders.

Allison Krause, 19, was killed by a bullet that went through her left upper arm and into her left side. She was protesting and was 110 yards away when she was killed. William Schroeder, 19, was killed by a bullet that went through his left back and seventh rib. He was a bystander and was 130 yards away when he was killed. Jeffrey Miller, 20, was killed by a bullet in the mouth. He was protesting and was the closet to the guards, 85 to 90 yards away when he was killed. Sandra Scheuer, 20, was killed by a bullet through the left side of her neck. She was a bystander and was 130 yards away when she was killed.22 Many believe it was the fault of both parties; the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest reported: “Violence by students on or off the campus can never be justified by any grievance, philosophy, or political idea. There can be no sanctuary or immunity from prosecution on the campus. Criminal acts by students must be treated as such wherever they occur and whatever their purpose. Those who wrought havoc on the town of Kent, those who burned the ROTC building, those who attacked and stoned National Guardsmen, and all those who urged them on and applauded their deeds share the responsibility for the deaths and injuries of May 4.”23 The tragedy that happened on May 4, 1970 was an awakening call to America; what are we doing when our children are being shot? Although, the Kent State Shooting was violent at times, no individual deserved to be killed for protesting or for being a bystander to the protest. After this tragedy, those in favor of the war fell suddenly silent, while America mourned.

Shortly after the event, the tragic day was further memorialized in the famous song by the rock group Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young: “Ohio.” This is that song:

 

  1. Jerry Lewis M and Thomas R. Hensley, “The May 4 Shootings at Kent State University: The Search for Historical Accuracy,”Kent State University (1998). https://www.kent.edu/may-4-historical-accuracy.
  2. “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S.  Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C, 1970), 240.
  3. “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest” (U.S.  Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C, 1970), 241.
  4.  Government, Politics, and Protest: Essential Primary Sources, 2006, s.v. “Kent State Shootings,” by John Filo.
  5.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S.  Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C, 1970), 242.
  6.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S.  Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C, 1970), 244.
  7.  Government, Politics, and Protest: Essential Primary Sources, 2006, s.v. “Kent State Shootings,” by John Filo.
  8.  The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: The 1960s, 2003, s.v. “Nixon, Richard Milhous,” by Melvin Small.
  9.  The Scribner Encylopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: The 1960s, 2003, s.v. “Nixon, Richard Milhous,” by Melvin Small.
  10.  Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Vietnamization,” by Vincent H. Demma.
  11.  Encylopedia of Modern Asia, 2002, s.v. “Vietnam War,” by Richard C. Kagan.
  12. Jerry M Lewis and Thomas R Hensley, “The May 4 Shootings at Kent State University: The Search for Historical Accuracy,” Kent State University, (1998). https://www.kent.edu/may-4-historical-accuracy.
  13. “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 254.
  14.  Jerry M Lewis and Thomas R Hensley, “The May 4 Shootings at Kent State University: The Search for Historical Accuracy,” Kent State University, (1998). https://www.kent.edu/may-4-historical-accuracy.
  15.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest,” (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 255.
  16.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 258-259.
  17.  Encyclopedia of Sociology, 2001, s.v. “Student Movements,” by Leonard Gordon.
  18.  World History Encyclopedia, 2011, s.v. “Student Protest Movements, 1945-1960,” by Alfred J. Andrea and Carolyn Neel.
  19.  Jerry M Lewis and Thomas R Hensley, “The May 4 Shootings at Kent State University: The Search for Historical Accuracy,” Kent State University, (1998). https://www.kent.edu/may-4-historical-accuracy.
  20.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 259, 260, 263, 267, 268, 274.
  21.  Jerry M Lewis and Thomas R Hensley, “The May 4 Shootings at Kent State University: The Search for Historical Accuracy,” Kent State University, (1998). https://www.kent.edu/may-4-historical-accuracy.
  22.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 273.
  23.  “The Report of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1970), 287.

Tags from the story

Kent State massacre

Student Protests

Vietnam War

Recent Comments

John Smith

My father has always talked about the Kent State tragedy, but to read about it in a less “opinionated” fashion has been a pleasure, despite the article’s somber nature. It does irk me, however to read that two of the casualties were just bystanders. I do believe that Kent State goes to prove that education is at the core of political reform and it is our responsibility as students and professors alike to promote change and unconventional thinking in our classes so that we may nurture a better future. That said, it is of greater importance to promote change through dialogue rather than violence.

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16/08/2018

10:44 am

Tyler Boyd

I grew up in Dayton, OH which is not too far from Kent State. This one article taught me more than I ever learned while in school. The way it is written I was able to picture myself there for the events that took place. I also appreciated how unbiased this article was. It surprised me that the iconic photo of the student putting the flower into the barrel of the soldier’s rifle, however the photos included and the video at the end were all phenomenal and helped to immerse me in the story.

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16/08/2018

10:44 am

Engelbert Madrid

Reading this article gave me more knowledge on the events of how the Vietnam War affected the lives of many young people. It is incredible of how many young adults came together to challenge the government and people that were in favor of the war, because this time event marks the strike of young people that want change and were engage on what was happening in their country. For example, the civil rights movement, rock n’ roll, and some television shows were in unison to protect the youth of America. Kent State was a tragic event and I hope that people in the United States and around the world can evaluate historical events, so that we can never forget our mistakes and the lives of innocent people.

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18/08/2018

10:44 am

Esperanza Rojas

This article brought a tremendous amount of information and emotion to the surface. Throughout this piece there might have been a few errors, whether it have been grammatical, or preference to how it was written, but the emotion movement of the story made it come together, especially using facts that tie into the story fluently, and the modern connection of the “March for Our Lives Movement”.

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18/08/2018

10:44 am

Honoka Sasahara

This article gave me more knowledge about Vietnam War and the matter occurred in Kent State University, and also feeling of sadness and anger against that. Such matter should not have occurred, however it is true that this tragedy and brave young people could change the society. I think again that we should remember them and save the society they made at the risk of their lives.

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19/08/2018

10:44 am

Didier Cadena

This was a very informative article. I had heard of the Kent. St tragedy before, but I never really read into it too much. The way that you structured everything made it exciting to read. It really kept me hooked. I had no idea about all the backstory that went into this event. I was unaware that the protests were a result of the Vietnam War.

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19/08/2018

10:44 am

Sarah Nguyen

As the daughter of a Vietnam War refugee, I take a special interest in things relating to the Viet. war. This was a great article, I liked how the author organized the information regarding the events that occurred, the background of why college students in particular were protesting, and the organizations that were associated at this time. I also really liked how the author connected March For Our Lives in the article, and related it back to how the youth of the 60s and today were and are taking a stand for what they believe in. I wish there was more background on how the draft included mostly African Americans, because the draft exempted those in college. At the time, most AA’s were not in university for a multitude of reasons involving money, discrimination, etc…, and the draft excluding those in college students was specifically aimed at AA’s. Great job, the pictures were relevant and helped the reader relate to the pain felt at Kent.

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19/08/2018

10:44 am

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