Ohio History Journal

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MARVIN FLETCHER

MARVIN FLETCHER

 

War in the Streets of Athens

 

On an August evening in 1904 terror struck the citizens of the small

southeastern Ohio town of Athens. Thousands of Ohio National Guard

and regular army troops were on joint maneuvers in the area. On the

evening of August 19 some of the regulars marched into town with

the aim of freeing one of their comrades who had been arrested by

some national guardsmen and locked in the county jail. When the mil-

itary police tried to stop them, the regulars fired their pistols. After

the smoke cleared, no regulars were visible, but four bodies lay upon

the street. Beside them lay an army hat with the red band of the field

artillery and the number fourteen on it. For many soldiers mock war-

fare had become all too real.

This incident took place at a time of transition and tension in the

relationship between the regular army and the national guard. Influ-

enced by the ideas of Emory Upton, an American military theorist

who sought to model the U.S. Army along Prussian lines, most pro-

fessional officers of the regular army considered the volunteer militia

units of the national guard poorly trained and militarily useless. Sup-

porters of the guard, organized into the politically influential National

Guard Association, held that the concept of the citizen soldier was an

intrinsic part of American democracy. Moreover they argued that

guard units had proved their military efficiency almost equal to that of

the regular army during the recent Spanish-American War.1

This debate was never fully resolved, but a compromise of sorts

was worked out when army-guard relations were reorganized in the

years immediately following the Spanish-American War. One of the

strongest and most influential supporters of the guard was Ohio

Congressman Charles W. Dick, himself a major general in the state

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marvin Fletcher, Associate Professor of History at Ohio University, wishes to thank

John Keifer, J.D., for help in unraveling the legal complexities of the cases which

grew out of the Athens riot.

 

1. Russel F. Weigley, History of the United States Army (New York, 1967), 275-78.