Bath Township At the time of the bombing, Bath Township was a civil township of 300 adult residents [9] located 10 miles (16 km) northeast of the city of Lansing in the U.S. state of Michigan. The present-day municipality of Bath Charter Township covers 31 square miles (80 km 2) [10] and the small unincorporated village of Bath is within its.
The Bath school disaster was a pair of bombings carried out on May 18, 1927, against Bath Consolidated School in Bath Township, Michigan, U.S. The attack killed 43 people. The 1927 Bombing That Remains America's Deadliest School Massacre More than 90 years ago, a school in Bath, Michigan was rigged with explosives in a brutal act that stunned the town.
The massacre at a small Michigan town remains the deadliest in United States history, even 98 years later. May 18, 1927 is etched into the fabric of a small Michigan town. Still the deadliest attack on a U.S.
School, the Bath School Disaster resulted in the deaths of 44, mainly children, in a small Michigan village in 1927. At a school in bucolic Bath, Michigan, a man named Andrew Kehoe had detonated several explosive charges, ultimately killing forty-five people, including himself. It was, and it remains, the worst school massacre in American history.
On May 18, 1927, a man named Andrew Kehoe blew up the school in Bath Township, Mich. Most of the 44 killed were children. It remains the deadliest attack on a school in U.S.
history. It is also. Bath, Michigan is the site of America's deadliest school attack and second deadliest bombing in the nation's history.
45 people, 38 of whom were children, died. Two people were taken to hospital after a possible chemical attack in Bath city centre. A police cordon was in place in the city following the incident, in which a woman reportedly "approached.
Andrew Philip Kehoe (February 1, 1872 - May 18, 1927) was an American mass murderer. Kehoe was a Michigan farmer who became disgruntled after losing an election to be the Bath Township Clerk. [c] He murdered his wife and then detonated bombs at the Bath Consolidated School on May 18, 1927, resulting in the Bath School disaster in which 45 people [Note 2] were killed and 58 more people were.