The Kent State Massacre
On This Day in History: May 4
“What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground?”
When it comes to remembering the Kent State Massacre, two things stand out: the song “Ohio” by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and the photograph of a despairing Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body of a slain protestor.
--On This Day in History Shit Went Down: May 4, 1970--
On May 4, 1970, students at Kent State University in Ohio were protesting the expansion of the Vietnam War, with U.S. forces bombing neutral Cambodia. Two thousand people showed up. So did the National Guard.
They tried to disperse the crowd with tear gas, which was thrown back at them by the protestors. Despite the protesters being at least seventy feet away and unarmed, dozens of Guardsmen proclaimed to fear for their lives and opened fire on the crowd. A presidential commission later asserted the slaughter “unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable.” No shit.
The body Vecchio cried over was that of Jeffrey Miller. The photograph seems to convey an image of a young woman crying over the death of a friend, but she didn’t know the man. Mary Ann was a fourteen-year-old runaway from Florida who was only on campus that day because it was where hitchhiking had taken her. “I didn’t know what to do,” she said of that moment. “I was screaming because I couldn’t help him.”
The image ran on the front page of almost every newspaper in the United States and many other publications internationally. For novice photographer John Filo, it won him a Pulitzer and launched his career. For Mary Ann, she said it ruined her life.
The governor of Florida said Vecchio was part of a communist conspiracy. When she returned home to her parents, neighborhood children and classmates shunned her. She received tens of thousands of pieces of hate mail saying things that would make any YouTube comment section seem tame by comparison.
Vecchio would struggle for years, eventually marrying and settling in Las Vegas. On the twenty-fifth anniversary of the massacre, she finally met the man who made her famous. John Filo approached her with sadness in his eyes, and she burst into tears and embraced him. Filo, who also suffered much backlash over the photo, said of the meeting, “I’m just glad she doesn’t hate me.”
And the song? Many radio stations banned it because of its criticism of President Nixon, but it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2009.
NOTE: This piece was researched and written by a human, not some bullshit “ai” plagiarism software.
Those who cannot remember the past need a history teacher who says “fuck” a lot. Get both volumes of ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY SH!T WENT DOWN.




Oops. The subtitle in the email said May 2.
It’s not hard to imagine that the officer who gave the order to fire on unarmed students protesting at Kent State is one of Pete Hegseth’s greatest heroes.