Monday, May 19, 2014

The Day Things Changed--The Poe School Bombing by Gordon L. Rottman



This is not an Old West related topic, but Cheryl suggested I write this up out of general interest, because of the era it occurred, and to contrast the differences on how things used to be compared to today.
It’s a sad tale as it discusses the 1959 bombing of Edgar Allen Poe Elementary School at 5100 Hazard Street in Houston, Texas. It was the first tragic example of a deadly school attack in modern times. I say “modern times” as there was a much more horrendous 1927 school attack in Bath, Michigan resulting in 44 deaths by an intentionally set dynamite explosion. Also there was the 1937 New London, Texas school explosion caused by a gas leak in which 295 students and teachers perished.
Books have been written on those tragedies, but no one has tackled the Poe School bombing. I’ve considered it, have undertaken initial research, and have access to official investigation records. Frankly, it would be a depressing effort and I’ve so many more fun projects on my plate including the sequel to The Hardest Ride; Ride Harder.

10:10am, September 15, 1959—Tuesday
Mrs. Kirby, our 5th grade teacher, stopped mid-sentence when the explosion boomed a shock wave through the school. Shattering glass rattled from the far side of the building. Our clock fell from the wall and a linear cloud of dust puffed around the room from the baseboards. One boy nearest the door leapt up and headed for it.
Mrs. Kirby very coolly said, “Be seated, the fire alarm’s not gone off.”
The moment he sat the alarm sounded and out we went as we had practiced monthly. We filed down the 6th grade hall, each class in-turn, and though the building’s end doors onto the playground.
We stepped into hell.
To our right was the asphalt hard-surface area and the first thing that came to my mind was that it looked like a burned trash pile spread across the double-basketball court. Lying closer was a young boy, his clothes blown off, his intestines spilled (I promise not to be any more graphic—it’s just that that was my first realization that people were hurt.) I realized then the smoldering trash pile included people.
The 5th and 6th grade teachers quietly moved us to the playground’s far side and we sat by class on the softball diamond, backs to the carnage, not that everybody didn’t turn to look. I saw a few injured kids staggering amid the ruinage along with a tall, thin teacher doing what she could.
 Our class exited the school from the doors at the upper left. This is the body of the first child I saw. A desperate mother searches for her child.

The first on the scene were fire trucks, then police, and then more cops. Ambulances arrived, but not that many. These were old-style station wagon-like ambulances, not the high-tech EMS ambulances we know today. There were no EMTs then. Ambulance crews merely scooped up the injured and hoped they could get them to a hospital alive. Most belonged to private ambulance companies or hospitals. ERs were nothing like they are today and they certainly were not prepared for anything like what had just occurred. Fortunately the main county emergency hospital and other hospitals were within 15 minutes.
The hard-surface area with the school in the background. Miss Johnson was moving the kids to the building wing on the left behind the trees when the bomb detonated.
I don’t know if it was confusion, shock, or the steadiness our teachers displayed that keep things under control. My parents were among the first to appear as they went into open their restaurant later in the morning. We lived three blocks away. Unlike today there was no lockdown. Parents got their kids and went home. Some kids walked home on their own—everyone lived close—there was no busing then. We even took a neighbor kid home as his parents were at work. You simply told the teacher and left.
I wasn’t rattled a bit and that perplexed me. My only confusion was that I didn’t know what to do the rest of the day. I ended up going to Kemah southeast of Houston with my dad. He had a restaurant there and it was strange hearing customers discuss what I’d seen a couple of hours earlier.

Some ambulances had to park in the school's front circular drive to load the injured. No EMS ambulances in those days. The metal awnings had recently been installed to shade the windows as there was no air conditioning.

Earlier that morning
Okay, what happened? A somewhat mentally disturbed man, 47-year old Paul Orgeron, had divorced his wife and abducted his son, 7-year old Dusty. Orgeron had brought his son to the school earlier to enroll him, but was turned away. He had no birth certificate or immunization records. The staff hadn’t felt he was a problem other than acting very confused and didn’t know his son’s former school’s name or the New Mexico town it was in. He soon returned, but instead of entering through the front, he went on the playground while 2nd grade recess was underway. Some kids though were inside taking assessment tests. In fact two girls from our class were detailed to help the teachers on the playground.
With son in tow and carrying a briefcase, Orgeron approached a 2nd grade teacher, Miss Patricia Johnson, and passed her two incomprehensible notes. She was concerned about his manner and noticed a doorbell buzzer on the briefcase’s bottom. Another teacher, Miss Jennie Kolter, sensed trouble and came to the scene. Orgeron wanted Johnson to gather the children around. Instead, she sent two kids to fetch the only adult male in the school, James Montgomery, the custodian, and the principal, Miss Ruth Doty. While Kolter talked to Orgeron, Johnson discreetly herded kids away. Doty, a very stern and strong-willed woman, feared and admired by us kids, took charge and began trying to get Orgeron off the school grounds.
It’s not clear what happened. Orgeron set the briefcase on his foot. It’s thought that it slipped rather than being intentionally set off. Six dynamite sticks detonated. Orgeron was disintegrated, his son shattered, Kolter and Montgomery blown apart, and two 2nd grade boys killed. Miss Doty was terribly injured and almost lost a leg. She had been standing behind the others. Two nearby boys each lost a foot and 15 other students were injured by blast and asphalt gravel including the two girls from our class who were helping get the kids away. They were among the most seriously injured.
At first, since they couldn’t find Orgeron’s body, the police thought he might still be on the grounds. His car was located and found wired with dynamite to detonate if started. He had purchased 150 sticks in a New Mexico hardware store—you could do that then—which were never located. It took time to piece together events leading up to the bombing and some questions were never answered.

The aftermath
As I was able to leave early, I didn’t see what arose when “every” fire truck, ambulance, tow truck, cop, reporter, and TV crew in the city showed up. Since there had been no preparations for such a catastrophic event, the teachers’ initial control evaporated. Frantic parents had to park blocks away as there was no place closer. Ambulances had difficulty getting through jam-packed streets. Parents ran all about trying to find kids who had been taken back inside. The National Guard was called to secure the school, as well as others that received bomb threats. Realistically, even if practiced to any degree, there’s little that could have been done to control it better.
How was it different from today? The next day school was open. About half the students attended with more returning each day. Mosquito-control trucks fogged the grounds to keep flies down as there were small body parts on roofs and in trees. We took a minute to bow our heads in silence. The following Monday all students were back. A couple of weeks later we had had a simple memorial service in the auditorium with Cub Scouts posting the flags. There was no army of counselors. No TV crews seeking interviews. No closing the school for the rest of the year or calls to tear it down. Not a single law suit. We moved on.
The hard-surface area was re-blacktopped and a chain-link fence installed around the playground. In October the two boys who’d lost a foot led the Halloween Festival parade in a go-cart. Our two severely injured girls, Martha Jo Mullen and Leah Tomlinson, returned and were applauded at lunch. Months later Miss Doty returned as principal and remained until she retired. New elementary schools were named after Miss Kolter and Mr. Montgomery. Occasional bomb threats were phoned in and each class was assigned garages at nearby homes for shelter as winter was coming on. Neighbors left their cars out so we could use the garages. We moved on. Every few years the local paper does a brief write-up on the anniversary, virtually a copy of previous years’.
As a personal note, the hero of the day was Pat Johnson who never received the credit she was due. Thirteen years later, after returning from Vietnam, I visited the school and looked up Miss Johnson. She’d been my 2nd grade teacher. She was still teaching 2nd graders. I had to tell her something. I’d seen some real heroes; real soldiers who kept steady no matter how bad things got. I told her she was a hero, she’d kept cool, did all the right things—recognized a threat, got the kids away, sent for help, and then took care of the injured and she was steady though out. It was her I’d seen on the smoldering hard-surface. Pat and I became close friends. It was an honor to have known such a woman.
It was simply a life experience. Things happen and you move on.

28 comments:

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    1. Thanks Joanne. I was hoping it might inspire me to get to the book on the subject. Still can't make up my mind.

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  3. I tried to post a comment earlier, but it didn't show up. Trying again.

    Like you say, life happens. Sometimes there is nothing we can do but move on. Your memories, the story it brings to mind how innocent we all were yet so strong. Thank you for sharing that event in your life. Doris

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  4. Thanks Doris. Yeah, a sad story. Don't mean to unsettle anyone. Just thought it of interest, especially to contrast how things have changed.

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    1. It wasn't unsettling to me, just sad, but also inspiring. The folks who did what they had to do, and I agree that your teacher needed to be remembered. An amazing person. Doris

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  5. What an incredible story. Somehow your matter-of-fact presentation conveys so much more of the horror than the full press core brings to contemporary tragedy.

    One question -- you said first that the bomber was disintegrated, but later that they couldn't find his body. I assume that was because he was at blast central, and not because there was any question about what happened to him?

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    1. I don't think the telling of a tragic story is well served by getting all bogged down with emotional issues.
      At first they did not find his remains on the site and assumed that he may be around. It was Pat Johnson who verified he was standing there when the bomb detonated. Later, all they positively identified on him was a big toe.

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  6. Gordo, thanks so much for sharing this part of your life with us. I did not know anything about the Poe bombing---you shed some light on it for the rest of us, and gave us a look at it through "firsthand" eyes. I hope you will eventually write your book about it. We tend to think of school bombings as a relatively recent thing, but this shows us it's not the case--so many people either don't remember or didn't know about this.

    My daughter, 27, tells me that so many of the kids she works with in the acting business here don't remember the Murrah Building bombing, even though it happened right here in our city--they weren't born yet, and no time is spent on these things in school.

    Wonderful post. I am so glad you included the pictures, too.
    Cheryl

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    1. Thanks for having me on Cheryl and thanks too for your words.
      I'm thinking hard about that book.

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  7. A very interesting post about what was clearly a harrowing experience to have lived through. Pat Johnson seems to have been a remarkable person and an inspiration.

    I think you should write that book, Gordo.

    Keith

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  8. This is an important part of history and how fast life can change for us all. I was in school during those years but didn't remember this at all. We were a lot less informed back then. Whether that's good or bad is up to others to decide.

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  9. I think it was on the national news for one or two days. You would think that something like that would have been a bigger deal then. Today it would have gotten vastly more time.

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  10. Just... wow. Incredible story. So sad, but also heroic reading. I can't say I've lived through such a tragedy, but retelling stories is one good way of keeping the past alive.

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  11. Thanks Meg. Even though it didn't have a serious effect on me, its still very vividly in my mind.
    Gordo

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  12. Thanks for sharing this very personal story. Often, we are affected more by tragedies than we realize. I've heard that, when the event occurs at a young age, the victim can become hyper-vigilant for life.

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  13. Traumatic events affect different people differently. I've seen people go through the same event react totally different from each other ranging from panic to complete control side-by-side. You just never know.

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  14. Wow! What a moving personal story. Thank you for sharing this with us. I can understand how depressing writing the book would be, but it would be a good thing for the public to have available. I'd never heard of this. Our school had bomb threats, and the worry of tornados and such, but we never really took them seriously. This was a horrible thing to have happened, especially to children, and I'm sorry you had to experience it.

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  15. Thanks for providing us with this wonderfully descriptive and clear account of that confused and surreal day, Gordon. I have a friend, Robert Taylor, who would love to get in touch with you to learn more about what transpired that day.

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  16. I grew up in Houston & don't think I ever heard about this. Thank you for the 1st-hand account. Goes to show you , if someone is intent on harming others, they'll find a way. So happy you were able to re-connect with Mrs. Johnson. There are so many heros in our teachers & most never know or receive credit.
    And thank you, sir, for your service in Vietnam.

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  17. I, too was at Poe during the bomb. I was in 1st. grade and we were lined up to go to recess at the back door. There is much more to tell about that day for me and if you decide to write a book I would love to share what happened to me when the bomb went off. I encourage, encourage and encourage you to write the book. You are an excellent writer and I feel the story needs to be told.

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  18. I had only been in Texas for a month and lived on Bartlett St., very close to Poe. I had just enrolled in the 7th grade and I recall this horrific incident well. It is a fact that we sometimes fail to realize how tragedy affects children. I can honestly tell you I experienced extreme fear of going to school and my school's bomb threats added to the concern for my own security. To have witnessed such a dreadful event must have been a terrifying experience. I too hope you consider writing your story. Mrs. Johnson sounds like a extraordinary woman and one who needs to be remembered. Your book can do that. Thank you for sharing your memories with us.

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  19. I'm glad you wrote this down. My mom is one of the badly injured girls you mentioned, Leah. She's alive, well, and sane, by the way. :) I am always interested in the stories of the kids who were uninjured and who were more aware of the aftermath, and some of those stories are truly horrifying. My mom's experience is different in that she was hospitalized and recovering through most of that, though her recollection of the event itself is also horrifying. In an odd twist, I also went to Poe for a bit, so that was always... interesting. I don't know that I would have had the emotional fortitude to send my kids there, were I in her position.

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  20. I was in 6th grade at Hollibrook Elem. in the Spring Branch School District and never heard a thing about this. thank You very much for writing your article.

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  21. Oh, I wish you would write a book about it. I’d be happy to help. Started Poe in the mid ‘60s.

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  22. I lived in the Poe neighborhood for many years in the 70's, and Poe was where I voted. The first time I heard about this was reading Stephen Jones' 1999 speech about his time as Timothy McVeigh's court appointed attorney. Jones mentioned that as a young man, he was in the first emergency crew to arrive at the Poe bombing scene. https://floridatls.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/1999-Stephen-Jones.pdf

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