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Bath Consolidated School

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Bath Consolidated School
Location
Bath Township, Michigan, U.S.
Information
TypePublic
Enrollmentc.240
WebsiteBath Community Schools' current webpage

Bath Consolidated School was a school in Bath Township, Michigan, United States. It was the target of the Bath School disaster on May 18, 1927, which killed 45 people and injured 58. Most of the victims were children in the second to sixth grades attending the school. This was the deadliest act of mass murder in a school in U.S. history.

Bath Township

Bath Township is a small community located ten miles northeast of Lansing, Michigan, and contains the unincorporated village of Bath. In 1922, Bath voters voted to form a district for the purpose of funding and constructing a consolidated school. There were 236 students enrolled when the school opened, ranging from the first to twelfth grades.

During the 1920s, many small one-room schoolhouses, where different grades shared the same classroom and teacher, were being closed in the U.S. Educators of the era believed that children would receive a better and more complete education if students could attend a single school at one location. The grades could be age-divided into classes, and the facilities could be of a higher quality. After years of debate, Bath Township created the school district and raised property taxes to pay for the new school. As a result, new taxes were imposed on landowners, including a member of the school board, Andrew Kehoe. Kehoe had been elected treasurer of the Bath Consolidated School board in 1924, and had briefly served as Bath Township's clerk before losing an April 1926 election.

Disaster

Main article: Bath School disaster

First-grade teacher Bernice Sterling recounted the explosion as being like a terrible earthquake. "It seemed as though the floor went up several feet," she said. "After the first shock I thought for a moment I was blind. When it came the air seemed to be full of children and flying desks and books. Children were tossed high in the air; some were catapulted out of the building."

Recovery and rescue

The bombing had destroyed the north wing of the school. During the search rescuers found an additional 400 pounds (230 kg) of dynamite Kehoe had placed in the south wing, which had failed to detonate. The search was halted to allow the Michigan State Police to disarm the devices. After this was completed and a sweep of the building made, the recovery efforts recommenced.

In the south wing, the State Police found unexploded materials along with an alarm clock timed to go off at 8:45 a.m., the same time as the explosion went off in the north wing. The reason why these explosives failed to detonate could never be conclusively determined. Investigators speculated that the initial explosion caused a short circuit in the second set of bombs.

Rebuilding

Cupola from the school building, today displayed at Bath School Memorial Park.

School resumed on September 5, 1927, and, for the 1927–28 school year, was held in the community hall, township hall, and two retail buildings. The board appointed O. M. Brant of Luther, Michigan, to succeed Huyck as superintendent. Lansing architect Warren Holmes donated construction plans, and the school board approved the contracts for the new building on September 14. On September 15, U.S. Senator James Couzens presented his personal check for $75,000 to the Bath construction fund to build the new school.

The board constructed a new wing with the donated funds, and the James Couzens Agricultural School was dedicated on August 18, 1928. The Couzens school building was demolished in 1975 and replaced with a small park dedicated to the victims. At the center of the park is the cupola of the original Bath Consolidated School.

See also

Notes

  1. Ellsworth, M.J. (1928) The Bath School Disaster, Ch. 1.
  2. Fate's Whim Foils Plot to Sacrifice All Pupils, Associated Press (May 19, 1927).
  3. Pawlak, op cit.
  4. Ellsworth, op cit., Ch. 2

42°49′00″N 84°26′57″W / 42.81667°N 84.44917°W / 42.81667; -84.44917

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