Kent State Shootings: Oral Histories

Ken Hammond Oral History

Kent State Shootings: Oral Histories

Ken Hammond Oral History

Transcription Show Transcript
Narrator Hammond, Ken
Narrator's Role Student at Kent State University in 1970
Date of Interview 2010-03-24
Description An undergraduate student studying political science at Kent State University beginning in 1967, Ken Hammond describes events on campus in the years prior to the May 4, 1970, shootings, including the walkout by Black United Students (BUS) in 1968. He discusses his involvement in Democratic Party politics, the Vietnam War protest movement, the SDS, and the Kent Committee to End the War. He was a speaker at the May 4, 1970, rally on The Commons and relates his eyewitness account of the shootings; he was near Jeffrey Miller when Miller was shot. He also discusses, in depth, his experiences during the aftermath of the shootings, including being interviewed by the FBI, his indictment and arrest as one of the “Kent 25,” helping to establish the Kent Legal Defense Fund, his involvement in the Tent City protests, and in the years following as a speaker at commemoration events.
Length of Interview 61:27 minutes
Places Discussed Buffalo (N.Y.)
Kent (Ohio)
New York (N.Y.)
Time Period discussed 1967-1972
Subject(s) Arrest (Police methods)--Ohio--Kent
Arthrell, Bill
College students--Ohio--Kent--Interviews
Daily Kent Stater
Eyewitness accounts
Kent 25
Kent Committee to End the War
Kent State Shootings, Kent, Ohio, 1970
Kent State Shootings, Kent, Ohio, 1970--Anniversaries, etc.
Kent State University--Student strike, 1968
Kent State University. Black United Students
Kent State University. ROTC Building--Fires
Miller, Jeffrey, d. 1970
Ohio. Army National Guard
Student movements--Ohio--Kent
Students for a Democratic Society (U.S.)
Students--Ohio--Kent--Interviews
Tent City (Kent, Ohio)
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements
Repository Special Collections and Archives
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Institution Kent State University
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Disclaimer The content of oral history interviews, written narratives and commentaries is personal and interpretive in nature, relying on memories, experiences, perceptions, and opinions of individuals. They do not represent the policy, views or official history of Kent State University and the University makes no assertions about the veracity of statements made by individuals participating in the project. Users are urged to independently corroborate and further research the factual elements of these narratives especially in works of scholarship and journalism based in whole or in part upon the narratives shared in the May 4 Collection and the Kent State Shootings Oral History Project.
Provenance/Collection May 4 Collection