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Andrew Kehoe

Andrew Philip Kehoe (February 1, 1872 – May 18, 1927) was an American mass murderer. Kehoe was a Michigan farmer who became disgruntled after losing reelection as treasurer of the Bath Township school board. He subsequently murdered his wife and then detonated bombs at the Bath Consolidated School on May 18, 1927, resulting in the Bath School disaster. Thirty-eight children and six adults were killed while fifty-eight more people were injured. Kehoe committed suicide near the school by detonating dynamite in his truck, causing an explosion which killed several other people and wounded more. He had earlier set off incendiary devices in his house and farm, destroying all the buildings and killing several farm animals.

Andrew Kehoe
Photo taken c. 1920
Born
Andrew Phillip Kehoe

(1872-02-01)February 1, 1872
DiedMay 18, 1927(1927-05-18) (aged 55)
Cause of deathSuicide by explosives
Occupation(s)Farmer, school board member and treasurer
Spouse
Ellen Agnes "Nellie" Price
(m. 1912; murdered 1927)
MotiveInconclusive
Details
DateMay 18, 1927
Location(s)Bath Township, Michigan
Target(s)Bath Consolidated School
Killed45 (including himself)[Note 1]
Injured58
WeaponsExplosives:

Bolt-action rifle:

Early life and education

Kehoe was born in Tecumseh, Michigan, among the younger of a family of 13 children. His parents were Philip Kehoe (1833–1915) and Mary (McGovern) Kehoe (1835–1890).[1] He attended Tecumseh High School and Michigan State College (later Michigan State University), where he studied electrical engineering. There, he first met his future wife, Ellen "Nellie" Price, the daughter of a wealthy Lansing family.[2]

After college, Kehoe went southwest, apparently working for several years as an electrician in St. Louis, Missouri. During this period, in 1911, he suffered a severe head injury in a fall[3] which resulted in him being in a coma for two weeks.[4]

Kehoe then moved back in with his father after the injury. During Kehoe's time away his mother had died and his father had married Frances Wilder, whom Kehoe did not like.[4] On September 17, 1911, Frances was severely burned when the family's stove exploded as she was attempting to light it. The fuel soaked her, with her body catching fire. Kehoe threw water from a nearby bucket on her; due to the oil-based nature of the fire, the water did nothing to put the flames out. Frances later died from her injuries, with allegations being made that the stove had been tampered with.[5][6][Note 2]

Marriage and family

After his return to Michigan, in 1912 he married Nellie Price. In 1919 the couple bought a 185-acre (75 ha) farm outside the village of Bath[8][9] from Nellie's aunt for $12,000 (equivalent to $337,000 in 2021[10]). He paid $6,000 in cash and took out a $6,000 mortgage.[2]

Personality

Kehoe was regarded by his neighbors as a highly intelligent man who grew impatient and angry with those who disagreed with him. Neighbors recalled that Kehoe was always neat, dressed meticulously, and was known to change his shirt at midday or whenever it became even slightly dirty. Neighbors also recounted how Kehoe was cruel to his farm animals, having once beaten a horse to death.[7] The Kehoes initially attended services at the Catholic church in Bath, but he refused to pay the church's parish assessment of members and prevented his wife from attending.[7]

Kehoe's neighbors thought he preferred mechanical tinkering to farming. His neighbor M. J. "Monty" Ellsworth wrote in his account of the disaster,

He never farmed it as other farmers do and he tried to do everything with his tractor. He was in the height of his glory when fixing machinery or tinkering. He was always trying new methods in his work, for instance, hitching two mowers behind his tractor. This method did not work at different times and he would just leave the hay standing. He also put four sections of drag and two rollers at once behind his tractor. He spent so much time tinkering that he didn't prosper.[7]

Recent analysis labels him a dangerous "injustice collector:" a person who remembers slights and holds a grudge for a long time. While many people may hold grudges, it becomes dangerous when a person begins to feel like a victim and lashes out.[11]

Bath Consolidated School administration

With a reputation for thrift, Kehoe was elected treasurer of the Bath Consolidated School board in 1924. While on the board, Kehoe fought for lower taxes and was often at cross purposes with other board members, voting against them and calling for adjournment when he did not get his way. He repeatedly accused superintendent Emory Huyck of financial mismanagement.[7]

While on the school board, Kehoe was appointed as the Bath Township Clerk in 1925 for a short period. In the spring 1926 election, he was defeated for the position, and was angered by his public defeat. His neighbor Ellsworth thought Kehoe started planning his "murderous revenge" against the community at that time. Another neighbor, A. McMullen, noticed that Kehoe stopped working altogether on his farm in his last year, and thought he might be planning suicide.[7]

During these years, Nellie Kehoe was chronically ill with tuberculosis, and had frequent hospital stays—at the time there was no effective treatment or cure for the disease. By the time of the Bath School disaster, Kehoe had ceased making mortgage and homeowner's insurance payments. The mortgage lender had begun foreclosure proceedings against the farm.[7][12]

Bath School disaster

The Bath School disaster is the name given to a series of explosions perpetrated by Kehoe on May 18, 1927, in Bath Township, Michigan, which killed 45 people including Kehoe himself, and injured at least 58. Most of the victims were children in the second to sixth grades (7–12 years of age) attending the Bath Consolidated School.[citation needed] The disaster remains the deadliest act of mass murder in a school in U.S. history.[13]

Kehoe killed his wife between May 16, when she returned home from a hospital stay, and the morning of May 18. He moved her body to a farm building before setting off incendiary explosions in their house and farm buildings.[14] About the same time, he had arranged timed explosions in the new school building. The materials in the north wing exploded as planned, killing many students and some adults inside. Kehoe had set a timed detonator to ignite dynamite and hundreds of pounds of pyrotol at the school, which he had secretly bought and planted in the basement of both wings over the course of many months. The second 500 pounds (230 kg) of explosives in the south wing did not detonate, so that part of the school was not destroyed.

As rescuers started gathering at the school, Kehoe drove up and stopped his truck. During a struggle with Superintendent Huyck, Kehoe detonated dynamite stored inside his shrapnel-filled truck, killing himself and Huyck, as well as killing and injuring several others (among them a boy who had survived the initial bombing).[15] During the rescue efforts, searchers discovered the additional 500 pounds (230 kg) of unexploded dynamite and pyrotol planted throughout the basement of the school's south wing. These explosives, connected to an alarm clock that was supposed to act as the detonator, had been set for the same time as the other explosion.

 
Sign on Andrew Kehoe's fence

After the bombings, investigators found a wooden sign wired to the farm's fence with Kehoe's last message, "Criminals are made, not born," stenciled on it.[12] When investigators were done taking an inventory of the Kehoe estate, they estimated that, prior to its destruction, sale of the unused equipment and materials on the farm would have yielded enough money to pay off the Kehoes' mortgage.

One of Kehoe's sisters claimed his remains and arranged for burial without ceremony in an unmarked grave at Mount Rest Cemetery in St. Johns, Michigan.[1][16] The Price family claimed Nellie's remains and had her body buried in Lansing, under her maiden name.[17]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Kehoe also killed several farm animals.
  2. ^ Monty Ellsworth's version of these events in The Bath School Disaster incorrectly differs on one detail—he says that the fire happened when Kehoe was 14 but agrees with other sources on points of fact. He does mention the rumors that the stove was tampered with.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Daggy, J.L. . Daggy Space. Archived from the original on March 21, 2016. Retrieved May 14, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Parker, Grant (1980). Mayday: History of a Village Holocaust. Los Angeles, California: Parker Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-9604958-0-1. Retrieved December 17, 2012.
  3. ^ Mayo, Mike (2008). American Murder: Criminals, Crime, and the Media. Detroit, Michigan: Visible Ink Press. p. 175. ISBN 978-1-57859-191-6. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Interview with Arnie Bernstein" (PDF). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. 2009. Retrieved August 4, 2017. ...an accident that put him in a coma for two weeks
  5. ^ Bernstein, Arnie (2009). "Chapter Two: Andrew P. Kehoe". Bath Massacre: America's First School Bombing. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11606-5.
  6. ^ . September 19, 1911. Archived from the original on August 5, 2017. Retrieved May 31, 2017 – via Michigan History Foundation.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Ellsworth, Monty J. (1991) [1927]. . The Bath School Disaster (Online ed.). Bath School Museum Committee. Archived from the original on October 24, 2017. Retrieved January 31, 2020 – via Daggy Space.
  8. ^ Ellsworth, Monty J. (1991) [1927]. . The Bath School Disaster (Online ed.). Bath School Museum Committee. OCLC 6743232. Archived from the original on October 24, 2017. Retrieved January 31, 2020 – via Daggy Space.
  9. ^ Parker, Grant (1992). Mayday, History of a Village Holocaust. Springville, Utah: Liberty Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-9604958-0-0.
  10. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  11. ^ O'Toole, Mary Ellen (September 2014). "The dangerous injustice collector: Behaviors of someone who never forgets, never forgives, never lets go, and strikes back!". Violence and Gender. Rochefort, New York: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 1 (3): 97–99. doi:10.1089/vio.2014.1509.
  12. ^ a b . The New York Times. May 20, 1927. Archived from the original on October 18, 2014. Retrieved January 15, 2013 – via Bauerle FreePages @ RootsWeb.com.
  13. ^ Vargas, Theresa (May 24, 2022). "Remembering the deadliest school massacre in U.S. history". Washington Post. Retrieved May 25, 2022.
  14. ^ , State of Michigan, May 23–25, 1927, pp. 349, 218–222, archived from the original on March 2, 2018
  15. ^ Burcar, Colleen (2011). It Happened in Michigan: Remarkable Events That Shaped History. Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot. ISBN 978-0-7627-6754-0. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  16. ^ Parker, Grant (1992). Mayday, History of a Village Holocaust. Lansing, Michigan: Liberty Press. pp. 150–152. ISBN 978-0-9604958-0-1.
  17. ^ Daggy, J.L. . Daggy Space Website. Archived from the original on March 21, 2016. Retrieved May 18, 2020.

External links

  • Andrew Kehoe at Find a Grave
  • Putnam, Judy (May 18, 2016). "Evil Remembered 89 Years Later". Lansing State Journal.

andrew, kehoe, andrew, philip, kehoe, february, 1872, 1927, american, mass, murderer, kehoe, michigan, farmer, became, disgruntled, after, losing, reelection, treasurer, bath, township, school, board, subsequently, murdered, wife, then, detonated, bombs, bath,. Andrew Philip Kehoe February 1 1872 May 18 1927 was an American mass murderer Kehoe was a Michigan farmer who became disgruntled after losing reelection as treasurer of the Bath Township school board He subsequently murdered his wife and then detonated bombs at the Bath Consolidated School on May 18 1927 resulting in the Bath School disaster Thirty eight children and six adults were killed while fifty eight more people were injured Kehoe committed suicide near the school by detonating dynamite in his truck causing an explosion which killed several other people and wounded more He had earlier set off incendiary devices in his house and farm destroying all the buildings and killing several farm animals Andrew KehoePhoto taken c 1920BornAndrew Phillip Kehoe 1872 02 01 February 1 1872Tecumseh Michigan U S DiedMay 18 1927 1927 05 18 aged 55 Bath Township Michigan U S Cause of deathSuicide by explosivesOccupation s Farmer school board member and treasurerSpouseEllen Agnes Nellie Price m 1912 murdered 1927 wbr MotiveInconclusiveDetailsDateMay 18 1927Location s Bath Township MichiganTarget s Bath Consolidated SchoolKilled45 including himself Note 1 Injured58WeaponsExplosives Dynamite Pyrotol firebombsBolt action rifle Winchester Model 54 30 06 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Marriage and family 3 Personality 4 Bath Consolidated School administration 5 Bath School disaster 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education EditKehoe was born in Tecumseh Michigan among the younger of a family of 13 children His parents were Philip Kehoe 1833 1915 and Mary McGovern Kehoe 1835 1890 1 He attended Tecumseh High School and Michigan State College later Michigan State University where he studied electrical engineering There he first met his future wife Ellen Nellie Price the daughter of a wealthy Lansing family 2 After college Kehoe went southwest apparently working for several years as an electrician in St Louis Missouri During this period in 1911 he suffered a severe head injury in a fall 3 which resulted in him being in a coma for two weeks 4 Kehoe then moved back in with his father after the injury During Kehoe s time away his mother had died and his father had married Frances Wilder whom Kehoe did not like 4 On September 17 1911 Frances was severely burned when the family s stove exploded as she was attempting to light it The fuel soaked her with her body catching fire Kehoe threw water from a nearby bucket on her due to the oil based nature of the fire the water did nothing to put the flames out Frances later died from her injuries with allegations being made that the stove had been tampered with 5 6 Note 2 Marriage and family EditAfter his return to Michigan in 1912 he married Nellie Price In 1919 the couple bought a 185 acre 75 ha farm outside the village of Bath 8 9 from Nellie s aunt for 12 000 equivalent to 337 000 in 2021 10 He paid 6 000 in cash and took out a 6 000 mortgage 2 Personality EditKehoe was regarded by his neighbors as a highly intelligent man who grew impatient and angry with those who disagreed with him Neighbors recalled that Kehoe was always neat dressed meticulously and was known to change his shirt at midday or whenever it became even slightly dirty Neighbors also recounted how Kehoe was cruel to his farm animals having once beaten a horse to death 7 The Kehoes initially attended services at the Catholic church in Bath but he refused to pay the church s parish assessment of members and prevented his wife from attending 7 Kehoe s neighbors thought he preferred mechanical tinkering to farming His neighbor M J Monty Ellsworth wrote in his account of the disaster He never farmed it as other farmers do and he tried to do everything with his tractor He was in the height of his glory when fixing machinery or tinkering He was always trying new methods in his work for instance hitching two mowers behind his tractor This method did not work at different times and he would just leave the hay standing He also put four sections of drag and two rollers at once behind his tractor He spent so much time tinkering that he didn t prosper 7 Recent analysis labels him a dangerous injustice collector a person who remembers slights and holds a grudge for a long time While many people may hold grudges it becomes dangerous when a person begins to feel like a victim and lashes out 11 Bath Consolidated School administration EditWith a reputation for thrift Kehoe was elected treasurer of the Bath Consolidated School board in 1924 While on the board Kehoe fought for lower taxes and was often at cross purposes with other board members voting against them and calling for adjournment when he did not get his way He repeatedly accused superintendent Emory Huyck of financial mismanagement 7 While on the school board Kehoe was appointed as the Bath Township Clerk in 1925 for a short period In the spring 1926 election he was defeated for the position and was angered by his public defeat His neighbor Ellsworth thought Kehoe started planning his murderous revenge against the community at that time Another neighbor A McMullen noticed that Kehoe stopped working altogether on his farm in his last year and thought he might be planning suicide 7 During these years Nellie Kehoe was chronically ill with tuberculosis and had frequent hospital stays at the time there was no effective treatment or cure for the disease By the time of the Bath School disaster Kehoe had ceased making mortgage and homeowner s insurance payments The mortgage lender had begun foreclosure proceedings against the farm 7 12 Bath School disaster EditMain article Bath School disaster The Bath School disaster is the name given to a series of explosions perpetrated by Kehoe on May 18 1927 in Bath Township Michigan which killed 45 people including Kehoe himself and injured at least 58 Most of the victims were children in the second to sixth grades 7 12 years of age attending the Bath Consolidated School citation needed The disaster remains the deadliest act of mass murder in a school in U S history 13 Kehoe killed his wife between May 16 when she returned home from a hospital stay and the morning of May 18 He moved her body to a farm building before setting off incendiary explosions in their house and farm buildings 14 About the same time he had arranged timed explosions in the new school building The materials in the north wing exploded as planned killing many students and some adults inside Kehoe had set a timed detonator to ignite dynamite and hundreds of pounds of pyrotol at the school which he had secretly bought and planted in the basement of both wings over the course of many months The second 500 pounds 230 kg of explosives in the south wing did not detonate so that part of the school was not destroyed As rescuers started gathering at the school Kehoe drove up and stopped his truck During a struggle with Superintendent Huyck Kehoe detonated dynamite stored inside his shrapnel filled truck killing himself and Huyck as well as killing and injuring several others among them a boy who had survived the initial bombing 15 During the rescue efforts searchers discovered the additional 500 pounds 230 kg of unexploded dynamite and pyrotol planted throughout the basement of the school s south wing These explosives connected to an alarm clock that was supposed to act as the detonator had been set for the same time as the other explosion Sign on Andrew Kehoe s fence After the bombings investigators found a wooden sign wired to the farm s fence with Kehoe s last message Criminals are made not born stenciled on it 12 When investigators were done taking an inventory of the Kehoe estate they estimated that prior to its destruction sale of the unused equipment and materials on the farm would have yielded enough money to pay off the Kehoes mortgage One of Kehoe s sisters claimed his remains and arranged for burial without ceremony in an unmarked grave at Mount Rest Cemetery in St Johns Michigan 1 16 The Price family claimed Nellie s remains and had her body buried in Lansing under her maiden name 17 See also EditList of school massacres by death tollNotes Edit Kehoe also killed several farm animals Monty Ellsworth s version of these events in The Bath School Disaster incorrectly differs on one detail he says that the fire happened when Kehoe was 14 but agrees with other sources on points of fact He does mention the rumors that the stove was tampered with 7 References Edit a b Daggy J L The Bath School Disaster Andrew Philip Kehoe Farmer School Board Treasurer Bomber Daggy Space Archived from the original on March 21 2016 Retrieved May 14 2016 a b Parker Grant 1980 Mayday History of a Village Holocaust Los Angeles California Parker Press p 27 ISBN 978 0 9604958 0 1 Retrieved December 17 2012 Mayo Mike 2008 American Murder Criminals Crime and the Media Detroit Michigan Visible Ink Press p 175 ISBN 978 1 57859 191 6 Retrieved May 3 2020 a b Interview with Arnie Bernstein PDF Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press 2009 Retrieved August 4 2017 an accident that put him in a coma for two weeks Bernstein Arnie 2009 Chapter Two Andrew P Kehoe Bath Massacre America s First School Bombing Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 11606 5 Frances Kehoe Death Certificate September 19 1911 Archived from the original on August 5 2017 Retrieved May 31 2017 via Michigan History Foundation a b c d e f g Ellsworth Monty J 1991 1927 Chapter Three Life of Andrew Kehoe The Bath School Disaster Online ed Bath School Museum Committee Archived from the original on October 24 2017 Retrieved January 31 2020 via Daggy Space Ellsworth Monty J 1991 1927 Chapter One The Bath Consolidated School The Bath School Disaster Online ed Bath School Museum Committee OCLC 6743232 Archived from the original on October 24 2017 Retrieved January 31 2020 via Daggy Space Parker Grant 1992 Mayday History of a Village Holocaust Springville Utah Liberty Press p 27 ISBN 0 9604958 0 0 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 O Toole Mary Ellen September 2014 The dangerous injustice collector Behaviors of someone who never forgets never forgives never lets go and strikes back Violence and Gender Rochefort New York Mary Ann Liebert Inc 1 3 97 99 doi 10 1089 vio 2014 1509 a b School Dynamiter First Slew Wife The New York Times May 20 1927 Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved January 15 2013 via Bauerle FreePages RootsWeb com Vargas Theresa May 24 2022 Remembering the deadliest school massacre in U S history Washington Post Retrieved May 25 2022 In the Matter of the Inquest as to the Cause of Death of Emery E Huyck Deceased Transcript of the May 23 25 1927 Clinton County Michigan Coroner s Inquest Pages 349 218 222 State of Michigan May 23 25 1927 pp 349 218 222 archived from the original on March 2 2018 Burcar Colleen 2011 It Happened in Michigan Remarkable Events That Shaped History Guilford Connecticut Globe Pequot ISBN 978 0 7627 6754 0 Retrieved January 15 2013 Parker Grant 1992 Mayday History of a Village Holocaust Lansing Michigan Liberty Press pp 150 152 ISBN 978 0 9604958 0 1 Daggy J L Ellen Agnes Price Kehoe Murder Victim wife of School Bomber Daggy Space Website Archived from the original on March 21 2016 Retrieved May 18 2020 External links EditAndrew Kehoe at Find a Grave Putnam Judy May 18 2016 Evil Remembered 89 Years Later Lansing State Journal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrew Kehoe amp oldid 1125547004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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