On May 18, 1927, Bath Township, Michigan, became the site of one of the worst school massacres in history. The man responsible was Andrew Kehoe, a fifty-five-year-old farmer, electrician, and school board treasurer. Known for his mechanical skill and stern temperament, Kehoe was respected publicly but feared privately for his temper and control. Years of financial struggle and anger over rising taxes used to fund the new Bath Consolidated School pushed him over the edge. When foreclosure loomed over his farm, his bitterness turned into a detailed plan for revenge against his own community. Over several months, Kehoe began purchasing explosives under the pretense of clearing land. He bought dynamite from local hardware stores and pyrotol, a World War I surplus explosive, from a government outlet that sold it cheaply to farmers. Using his school access, he planted hundreds of pounds of dynamite and pyrotol beneath floors and in the basement, wiring them to clocks, batteries, and detonators to explode during classes. At home, Kehoe set another trap. He wired his barn and house with explosives, killed his wife, and set the property on fire. As neighbors ran to help, the first blast tore through the Bath Consolidated School at 8:45 a.m. The north wing disintegrated in a roar heard for miles. Parents raced toward the school, shouting their children’s names through smoke and debris. While rescuers searched for survivors, Kehoe drove up in a truck loaded with dynamite, gasoline, and scrap metal. He called the superintendent over, then detonated it, killing himself, the superintendent, and several others. In the ruins, investigators found another three hundred pounds of unexploded dynamite wired beneath the school’s south wing. In total, thirty-eight children and six adults died, and more than fifty were injured. The Bath School disaster remains one of the deadliest school attacks in American history. #History #USHistory #America #USA #HistoryNerd #Michigan









