I do not know why Kent State affects me so. I was so young at the time that I have no active memories of the events as they transpired. I might first have heard of the story watching an NBC television movie sometime in the early eighties.
Four people dying is tragic, those wounded had the rest of their lives changed forever but, in today’s world young people getting killed and maimed in large numbers is sadly, tragically, all too commonplace.
Of course the deaths at Kent State were at the aegis of the state not some lone psychopath. The feeling of absolute incompetence never goes away either. The politicians trying to appear tough, the ineptitude of the leaders of the guard, it all feels preventable.
This book offers a new piece of evidence of what might have set off the firing. It’s plausible, but it changes nothing other than adding to the tragedy fifty years later. The possibility that the first shot was meant to prevent injury but instead led to it is just one more failure.
I made many, many, notes which are below.
In the foreword the author states that the Kent state shooting gave rise to two competing narratives, that oversimplified the motives and characters of the people involved, lacked nuance, and ignored ambiguity, complexity, unpredictability, confusion, CHAoS, and cruel pathos. One narrative to pick the shooting is lethal violence in the name of the state directed against those who sought to defy its wet. The other narrative depicted picture of the sthe author states that the Kent state shooting gave rise to two competing narratives, that oversimplified the motives and characters of the people involved, lacked nuance, and ignored ambiguity, complexity, unpredictability, confusion, chaos, and cruel pathos. One narrative depicting, the shooting is lethal violence in the name of the state, directed against those who sought to defy its read. The other narrative depicting the shooting as law-enforcement, giving troublemakers to come up and stay deserved. for more than 50 years, little to no middle ground has existed between these competing narratives. Opinions remain as sharply drawn as ever. Most Americans, when they look at Kent state, have not allowed themselves to understand the opposing viewpoint or to accept shared responsibility.
In 2024, with much of our narrative, both politically and culturally, is anything much different between the opposing sides?
The book opens with a chapter titled “the divided America of 1970“, and explains how we got to the events of Kent State. Writing about the first protest against the war in 1965 he describes that “most of the young men wore ties, and mostly young women wore skirts. they were polite affairs.” When a Rutgers professor declared “I do not fear or regret the impending Vietcong victory in Vietnam,” a letter, a reply to the New York Times stated “the victory for the Vietcong, which Professor Genovese welcomes would mean, ultimately, the destruction of freedom of speech for all men for all time, not only in Asia, but in the United States as well. Any individual employed by the state should not be allowed to use his position for the purpose of giving Aiden comfort to the enemies of the state.” That writer was future republican president, Richard Nixon.
Hyperbolic. March? Yes and that was in 1965 things were about to get much much worse. I do find it interesting however, that in Nixon’s letter, he talked about the destruction of freedom of speech. At the same time he was criticizing the professor, for his use of said freedom of speech.
The 1967 in march on Washington. The closure of Columbia University. Chicago, 1968. These are all events very familiar to people of the time in those who have studied it.
One aspect perhaps not talked about much of the time is how these events, the divisions, the protest, took George Wallace from a one issue candidate, that being race, in allowed blue-collar Americans to see that decency and social order or coming under assault in more general terms. It is not hard to take the platform of George Wallace, and see how it was the template of the southern strategy that became the SpringBoard to the new conservatism of the republican party
The Weatherman and their excesses are given much space. Growing out of SDS and both rage and disappointment over the ineffectiveness of peaceful protest their excesses did nothing to diminish the divisions of the country.
Their excesses allowed the Nixon administration to lump all protesters in with the radicalism, violent actions of the Weathermen.
Divide, Divide, divide is always the mantra. If either side can move those in the middle to their side by the radical words and actions of those few on the extremes they will do so. Look at our current election. It never changes
An important quote from former Weatherman Brian Flanagan “ if you think that you have the moral high ground, that is a very dangerous position. You can do some really dreadful things”
Again, nothing ever changes, the end justifies the means is always the end result of fanaticism
and plenty of people we’re ready to be divided. 60 years later it’s hard to remember or certainly for those who weren’t involved or alive at that time they may not realize who the parents of these protesters were. The parents of these young people in college in the late 60s were people who had come through the depression, World War II, and it was simply not fathomable to them, who had undergone so much, that their sons and daughters were “throwing it all away.”
There is always a clash between generations, but the Nixon administration chose to use that, amplify that, for their own political purposes.
These same divisions exist now, and are amplified in the same way. Take out the word weatherman and substitute a liberal group from today, albeit one that is not violent, but just disrespectful of the cultural norms of the previous generation. “ blue-collar workers and middle-class conservatives so nothing of themselves in the weatherman, whose actions as reported in the media, lead conservatives to generalize about all antiwar protesters. Conservatives were not waiting to be enlightened by a radical vanguard. What move them, what their attitudes were, could not have been more different. They decorated their hardhats with a flag, the cows and the motto “for God and country.“ Th They built the schools that protesters wanted to burn down. They felt deep anticipate toward elites, especially radical elites with college draft deferment. Many of them had served in World War II or Korea and viscerally despise antiwar protesters. They watch, family, friends, and neighbors, draft to fight for America, in a vicious, an unpopular war, only to see us at service demeaned by what they considered a bunch of pampered, overprivileged, flag, desecrating, snot houses. To work and class white, antiwar protesters were supposed to never toiled, just look for trouble. to conservatives, the days of rage in the Greenwich village explosion revealed a movement that had to generated into nihilistic violence. They Sara Creuset, not to write wrongs, but to terrorize citizens. Blue-collar Americans, who probably still with hands over their hearts during the playing of the national anthem, at sporting events, so long hairs, as unpatriotic draft dodgers, and to them draft dodging, was nothing more than old fashion, cowardice based on the fear of facing enemy rifles, in the jungle, the Vietnam. They saw respect for the military replaced by contempt. They saw chair, a symbol of patriotism, such as the flag, this mess, desecrated, even burned, some protest , they saw militance not as equally patriotic citizens with very different politics, but as bums, rotten, apples, nihilistic, anarchist, “The Enemy.”
By the spring of 1970, America was divided into warring camps that spoke the same language, and share the same nationality, but could not, and would not try to, understand each other. Each side refused to acknowledge the legitimacy of the other, and believe that those who disagreed with them were acting in bad faith, if not part of a sinister conspiracy. It was a tense, suspicious, and combustible atmosphere that required only a spark to ignite a tragedy. “
As I read that last paragraph, six days before the election of 2024, one feels history turning and folding in on itself.
The events of that fated weekend have, as they say, many fathers. It is worthwhile to note,however, that the words of political leaders, both nationally and locally, did nothing to lower the temperature of events. In fact they exacerbated it. On Friday, May 1, the night after his Cambodia speech Nixon, while visiting the pentagon, gave an off tne cuff remark evidently not realizing his remarks were being recorded. In them he contrasted “ kids who are just doing their duty“ in Vietnam with “these bums” - “ The luckiest people in the world, going to the greatest universities“ - “blowing up the campuses.”
Also inflaming the situation and with more power to immediately use his power to send events in the wrong direction was Governor Rhodes. With a hotly contested primary for the Republican nomination for Senate happening on May 5th, Rhodes did everything in his power to position himself as the take charge, law and order candidate. On Sunday while events calmed on campus in the light of day Rhodes spoke to reporters at the Kent Firehouse Number 1 saying in part “ we’ve seen here in the city of Kent probably the most vicious form of campus oriented violent yet perpetrated by dissident groups. We’re going to put a stop to this. We’re going to use every part of law-enforcement in Ohio to drive them out of Kent. We are going to eradicate the problem.” He paused a moment and then went even further “ they are worse than the brown shirts and communist element and also the night riders in the vigilantes they are the worst type of people that we harbor in America. No one is safe it’s just that simple no one is safe.“ Instead of exerting a calming influences his table something theatrics added fuel to the fire students felt that he had equated them with Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan.
One female student was quoted “If tne President thinks I’m a bum and the Governor thinks I’m a Nazi, what does it matter how I act.”
Would Rhodes have acted differently had his primary, in which he was trailing, not been in three days. Truthfully, probably not. The division between the generations was at a pretty extreme point. It is a question to ponder, however.
The events of May 4 are a comedy of errors but not the least but funny. These guardsmen had been in duty for a week, these were for the most part not fully trained soldiers and they had never been the main enforcement at riots and strikes and other times they had called out.
General Canterbury was both overmatched and brazenly confident of his abilities. The soldiers were put in a terrible position. Of import to anger is how much he lied in later testimony. At least according to multiple statements of his officer subordinates as to what he ordered and when.
We learn some new information in this book. Over the last decades we have heard rumors of orders to shoot or a small cadre of the soldiers deciding they had had enough.
If Sargent McManus is to be believed it was nothing with such malice aforrethought.
Canterbury had marched the men into a trap by the athletic playing fields. Penned in on three sides they were pelted with rocks, pipes and all sorts of materials from a nearby construction site.
A decision to March back up zblanket Hill through the quad and back to the burned out ROTC building. As they did many students followed, getting closer and closer. The soldiers using gas masks could barely see. McManus saw some of his soldiers kneel and aim. It was a bluff, an attempt to get them some room. The students were convinced that they did not have live ammunition in their guns. Canterbury had not had the troops make the requisite announcement, stating the fact that they were live bullets in the guns of course even if they had with people and believe them, would have been heard, as the loudness and the decibel level w was extreme
When McManus saw his men kneel, he thought they were going to fire, so he screamed in the air in the air and took his pistol and shot it in the air. In the confusion, nothing was understood clearly. It is a general consensus that at this time, hearing that initial shot, some of the soldiers fired, thinking there had been an order, this laugh, McManus for the last 40 years, feeling an extreme guilt over his actions, and in truth, in his misrepresenting the facts at the times of the original hearings. In trying to prevent a catastrophe, his original shot appears to have been the spark.
As soon as the shooting started Major Harry Jones could be seen racing up the line of soldiers, at considerable risk to himself, beating the men with his stick to get them to stop firing. The book states “ many guardsmen had to be shaken by the shoulders to make them stop.” Which implies that even if the firing started accidentally a bloodlust set in one firing began.
Sixty seven bullets traveled, some nearly a mile away, striking many, killing four. The book gives a play by play, a detail of each victims location and actions leading up to the firing. Two of the four dead could not in anyway be considered as more than bystanders, people in the wrong place. Only Jeff Miller could be called a real combatant in the activities of the day but that should in no way construe that the end result was deserved. Later, in testimony, some soldiers admit they aimed into the crowd, some at certain students. Lies told about Jeff Miller started almost immediately led by the planting of an old revolver on his person by Csptain Ron Snyder. Snyder lied in statements over and over, then under oath to the grand jury before recanting at the civil trial and admitting his perjury. He was never prosecuted
Having read James Michener’s book on Kent State one of the more remarkable sections to me has always been the aftermath, the public opinion, the letters to the editor and such. This is a conservative country, by and large, and that is borne out in the response.
Some of the injured were blamed as guilty by family members and loved ones. Human nature requires for many a reason for atrocities. To believe that soldiers could injure and maim innocents is to disconcerting. Wild rumors spread about Allison Kraus and her hygiene and sexual promiscuity. Sandy Schuer was a radical communist. Jeff Miller had a gun. None of this was true.
General Canterbury was strongly at fault. His statements in investigations are strongly at odds with almost every other participant, serving to obfuscate the truth and repel blame.
Reading the notes from the parents of the deceased, how their lives were shattered, it’s still heart rending. Every death is tragic to those who love the dead but there seems a special pain to losing a child not in war, not in an accident, but to a shooting such as this.
Today’s equivalent would be a school shooting I suppose but even that is. Or administered by an agent of the state.
I suppose one can look at the divisions and fissures in our country of 2024 and point to many different moments and say “this was where it all went wrong.” Kent State happened, after all, in 1970. The preceding seven years alone had seen a country riven by war, assassinations, and culture clashes.
Consider a speech given by Army Chaplain Major John Simone of the Ohio guard just one week after the shootings. Speaking to a Kiwanis club luncheon undoubtedly filled with supporters of the soldiers actions he said :
“ I am sure that some of you in this room wanted us to kill more…The younger generation is naive, life is not that simple, but (their) elders run from change by placing the responsibility for every rocky event on some Communist conspiracy. The older generation that wields power now has sold out to its fear of Communism. Perhaps the middle generation can gain the power and achieve the maturity which is not afraid of criticism or change. If we do not, life will go on as usual-there will be more Kents and Jacksons and Vietnams and Cambodias and with each new horror the solid middle class will become smaller and smaller until there is nothing left but two unspeaking and unspeakable extremes tearing the guts out of this great country. “
Might Kent State and America’s reaction to it have been the death knell of any semblance of the post war American unity.
One could write all day. Fifty or more years later this event is a scar across our history.