Fire in the Heartland
The Kent State Story
The Kent State Story
This documentary examines the events leading up to the May 4th, 1970, shooting of unarmed students by the Ohio National Guard at Kent State University, which left four students dead and thirteen wounded. Told through firsthand accounts, the film places the tragedy within the broader civil rights and anti–Vietnam War movements of the 1960s and 1970s.
The shootings sparked the largest student strike in U.S. history, spreading to more than 3,000 campuses nationwide. Just ten days later, police killed two students at Jackson State College in Mississippi, an event that received far less national attention. The film traces how years of organized activism, racial injustice, opposition to the Vietnam War, and inflammatory political rhetoric created the conditions for these acts of state violence.
Featuring more than twenty personal testimonies, Fire in the Heartland offers an intimate look at a pivotal moment in American history and provides critical context as campus protests and state responses once again shape national conversations.
Date: Tuesday, April 28th, 2026
Time: 1:00 p.m.
Location: Granville Branch
Format: In-Person
Cost: Free
Audience: Adults & Teens
Registration: Not Required
Runtime: 56 minutes, not rated
Made possible through Kanopy