May 4, 1970: ‘4 Dead In Ohio’ … We Won’t Forget

 

Kent State, Ohio, May 4, 1970
Kent State, Ohio, May 4, 1970. This is John Filo’s famed picture of Mary Vecchio over Jeff Miller’s dead body.

Originally posted on May 3, 2009

May 4, 1970: Four students murdered, nine wounded by National Guardsmen, on the campus of Kent State in Kent, Ohio.

Allison Krause, William Schroeder, Jefferey Miller and Sandra Scheuer were killed in the 13 second fusillade of 67 shots fired by the Guardsmen, after an order to fire was given.

No one has ever been held accountable for this massacre. And no one will ever be. But we won’t forget.

For YouTube videos of the massacre, go here.

(The above was originally posted May 4, 2008.)

“Four dead in Ohio,” sang Crosby Stills Nash and Young.  It was an event and song that described a generation. It became an anthem to many, as a remembrance to a horrible, murderous day – a day when the Vietnam War came home.

“The chickens have come home to roost,” the saying goes.

Another saying that anti-war protesters had chanted back then was: “Bring the war home!”

The National Guardsmen beat us to it.

How the Hell Did Things Get So Bad ….

You have to go back to the historical context to really understand how things got so bad that National Guardsmen opened up with live bullets on defenseless demonstrators on a college campus in middle America. (Here’s one account.)

In 1968 Richard Nixon was elected with his promise to end the Vietnam War, a war that President Johnson had beefed up substantially after taking over when JFK was assassinated. Significant anti-war protests had been occurring and increasing in intensity since 1965. They grew so intense that they forced Johnson to bow out of the ’68 presidential contest. With the Democrats themselves split over the very issue of the War – a split bloodily manifested in the streets of Chicago during Mayor Daley’s romp against demonstrators – Nixon was able to nudge past Hubert Humphrey and enter the White House as the “peace candidate”.

But when Nixon actually expanded the war in Southeast Asia by invading Cambodia / Kampucha in the early Spring of 1970 – the kids – the college kids who were the foot soldiers of the anti-war movement – went ballistic.

College and high school campuses across the nation exploded in protests. Sit-ins, take-overs of campus buildings and ROTC facilities were commonplace.

Even in San Diego

It was true, that even in San Diego, colleges campuses were on fire -so to speak. Here’s how we described it in our earlier histories:

San Diego Campuses Explode

San Diego university and college campuses were no exception to the explosive nature of protest at this point. San Diego State was shut down. At UCSD, a widely-supported student strike had rendered the La Jolla campus quiet except for the hub-bub of strike activities, leafleting, teach-ins, rallies, bonfires at night…

In early May striking students from college campuses all around San Diego county wanted to show their unity in opposing the war; the idea was to stage one joint action to protest the widening US involvement by targeting one prime military facility. At the planning meeting attended by hundreds of students from SDSU, UCSD, Cal-Western, City College, the community colleges, a few high schools, various ideas were thrown about, until almost by universal acclamation, the target was decided: the Naval Electronics Laboratory up in Point Loma.

So, one early weekday morning in mid-May, 3,000 students converged at the entrance of the Lab along Catalina Boulevard –in the usually sedate and conservative neighborhood of Point Loma. The entrance to the military facility was effectively blocked by the sheer numbers of students walking across the boulevard, bringing business at the Lab to a halt for several hours. No disrespect was shown drivers, there was no violence, no arrests were made, — just a solemn slow-moving mass of people circulating in front of the entrance — San Diego Police officers hung back, their numbers entirely dwarfed by those of the protesters.

A week into the student strike, California Governor Ronald Reagan — who could not appear at a college campus without causing a disturbance — signed an order closing all the state university and college campuses. This gubernatorial decree effectively ended — for awhile at least – the college bases of the anti-war movement in California.

_____________________

We do remember. Please save a quiet moment today for these martyrs. There is also a commemoration at Kent State today. The 39th Kent State Commemoration.  Check this out.

A former lawyer and current grassroots activist, I have been editing the Rag since Patty Jones and I launched it in Oct 2007. Way back during the Dinosaurs in 1970, I founded the original Ocean Beach People’s Rag - OB’s famous underground newspaper -, and then later during the early Eighties, published The Whole Damn Pie Shop, a progressive alternative to the Reader.

20 thoughts on “May 4, 1970: ‘4 Dead In Ohio’ … We Won’t Forget

  1. Thanks Frank, I’ve been playing that tune on my guitar for the last couple of weeks… http://obrag.org/?page_id=132&page=2

    Ohio
    Lyrics by Neil Young

    Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
    We’re finally on our own.
    This summer I hear the drumming,
    Four dead in Ohio.

    Gotta get down to it
    Soldiers are gunning us down
    Should have been done long ago.
    What if you knew her
    And found her dead on the ground
    How can you run when you know?

    Gotta get down to it
    Soldiers are gunning us down
    Should have been done long ago.
    What if you knew her
    And found her dead on the ground
    How can you run when you know?

    Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
    We’re finally on our own.
    This summer I hear the drumming,
    Four dead in Ohio.

    Here’s a live albeit rough version of CSN&Y performing it 4 years later

    Now I’m wondering if their song Chicago was about Ken Secor’s piece?
    http://obrag.org/?p=6917

  2. No wait, the song Chicago was about the 1968 DNC. And yet the lyrics fit perfectly for the late 1800’s there as well. http://obrag.org/?p=6917

    Sorry, that city just has such a rich tradition of American history.
    http://growingbolder.com/articles/living/politics/dnc-chicago-1968-192208.html

    Chicago

    Graham Nash, 1970

    Though your brother’s bound and gagged
    And they’ve chained him to a chair
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    Just to sing
    In a land that’s known as freedom
    How can such a thing be fair
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    For the help we can bring
    We can change the world –
    Re-arrange the world
    It’s dying – to get better
    Politicians sit yourself down,
    There’s nothing for you here
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    For a ride
    Don’t ask Jack to help you
    Cause he’ll turn the other ear
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    Or else join the other side
    We can change the world –
    Re-arrange the world
    It’s dying – if you believe in justice
    It’s dying – and if you believe in freedom
    It’s dying – let a man live it’s own life
    It’s dying – rules and regulations, who needs them
    Open up the door
    Somehow people must be free
    I hope the day comes soon
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    Show your face
    From the bottom to the ocean
    To the mountains of the moon
    Won’t you please come to Chicago
    No one else can take your place
    We can change the world –
    Re-arrange the world
    It’s dying – if you believe in justice
    It’s dying – and if you believe in freedom
    It’s dying – let a man live it’s own life
    It’s dying – rules and regulations, who needs them
    Open up the door
    We can change the world

  3. Dave, thanks again. In the song, the lyrics :

    “Though your brother’s bound and gagged
    And they’ve chained him to a chair”

    refer to Black Panther leader Bobby Seale, a defendant in the Chicago 8 trial, who was bound and gagged in the courtroom by Judge Julius Hoffman. The Chicago 8 were on trial for supposedly causing riots at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago.

    All charges and/or convictions against them were later dropped or overturned. The Skolnick Report – the official report of the commission assigned to access the Chicago riots – determined that it had been – in their words – “a police riot”.

  4. As I look back & reflect on The Kent State Killings I’m both embarrassed and proud to be an American. Embarrassed because the world got to see my government use live ammunition and open fire on fellow Americans who were doing what was expected of them and that is protesting a government that was not listening to its people. And proud of what happened afterwards. A huge protest all over the country with the pinnacle being in Washington DC. There was no apathy and there was no fear. The incident galvanized it for me. It was Us against Them and the law was on our side. The more they clubbed us and the more pepper gas they used on us the more it became apparent that they had lost. Kent State was the epiphany for me. I will always look at my government with wary eyes. For me that’s what the framers of the constitution provided for and that’s my obligation as an American. Allison, Jeffrey, William and Sandra will never be forgotten. Neither will Nixon.
    GG

  5. Time for me to finally move on. It’s been a long time coming, but the change will do me good.
    Peace and love be with you KSU.
    Love,
    Sunshine 1970

  6. We were going to re-post this tomorrow but realized it was already the favorite page of our readers today, other than the home page, so up it went.

  7. Rest assured that generals on a Hollywood stage telling us how well a war is going, then Ollie North interviewing soldiers in clean blood free uniforms will never excite the lazy public enough to cause a Vietnam style protest. That is why the merchant bankers set up an arranged marriage between corporate media and the Military Industrial Complex. The New Pearl Harbor and the FAKE war on terror would never have survived a Vietnam era press.

  8. On May 4, 1970, I was twenty years old, sitting in a Poli-Sci class. There was no end of current events to discuss that semester- flag burning, illegal search and seizure, the use of executive power, waging war and the wages of war. But it was the last week of the semester before finals. It was a gorgeous spring day- something to be appreciated in Pittsburgh. The windows of the classroom were open and we were all looking longingly at the expanse of bright green grass outside and we were already thinking about the summer ahead. And then suddenly there were people running and shouting and banging on the classroom doors and we all spilled out onto the Commons with no idea about what was happening except for “shootings at Kent State students dead.”

    I was paralyzed with fear and a deeply visceral sense of foreboding that only deepened when I saw that iconic picture in the evening news paper and on the news. It was unimaginable to me, it had never occurred to me, that our own government would turn loaded rifles against its own citizens, its own children. It was 1970, and a long hot summer lay ahead.

    That image of Mary Vecchio kneeling beside the dead body of Jeff Miller is burned into my brain. It is 2010 and that photograph is no less arresting today than it was then, except that today I am looking back through time at my own younger self in that image of Mary Vecchio’s raw grief. This is what it meant to bear witness to the unimaginable. Dropping to one’s knees in shock, opening one’s arms in supplication to what? The agony in that face. The still body in front of her. At this moment, I think of Greek tragedy and I feel terribly terribly old.

    On May 4 1970 I lost my innocence. Up to that point I had been absorbing and thinking about issues and ideas that were completely at odds with those of my own upbringing. Something coalesced inside of me that day that would become seminal to the woman whom I have become.

    To Dave Gilbert’s musical comments I add CSNY’s:
    “Find the cost of freedom, buried in the ground
    Mother earth will swallow you, lay your body down”
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SK6Nj-buTwg

    The death of Allison Krause, William Schroeder, Jeffrey Miller and Sandra Scheuer was a waste of four young lives. Never again.

  9. Interesting memories of my generation, not necessarily pleasant. I was in an engineering school at the time and editor of the school paper. In my steel design class the professor decided the discussion class would be on my editorial instead of steel. I wasn’t real popular with a bunch of engineer types that week. I have no regrets many of the students felt different when there number was called.
    Maybe there is something ot be said about a non volunteer fighting force

  10. Well & good, but NO ONE seems to remember Jackson State, Mississippi, 15 May 1970, 2 students killed & 12 wounded, same situation, ‘ceptin’ the students were black. Once again, the racism that infects us all makes itself known. Why not Kent St AND Jackson St??? Incidentally, 58% of Americans, including substantial numbers of faculty & administration & even parents of the students, approved killing the students.

    WAKE UP, America!!! HAH! Never……….

    1. Not true, Joe. We posted an article with photos the last two years here on this blog. Do a search.

    2. Joe- where were you on May 15 2010? Please tell us how you responded to what happened then. Without all of our voices the truth can never be served.

    3. i was thinking about jackson state as i was scrolling thru the commentaries. thank you Joe for your post.

  11. Joe, David, Anna and rak, please be advised that the OB Rag posted a very good commemoration to the Jackson State killings on our blog in 2008 and I believe we reposted it again last year. Go to http://obrag.org/?p=765

  12. I know this is kind of off topic about the song itself, but is there any info out there as to what became of the Guardsman who gave the call to fire and the individuals who actually pulled the trigger? It’s just a sad fact that they move on with their life despite loss of life they caused. I am always a big supporter of our veterans and very much in the mentality of hate the war but not the warrior, however there are those who went above and beyond what I believe is acceptable. My Lai anyone? And of course this. I know it’s wishful thinking, but I’d like to see these guys show some cajones and come forward and just give their thoughts and feelings despite possible repercussions.

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