American History
Related: About this forumOn this day, August 24, 1970, the Army Mathematics Research Center at UWisconsin was bombed.
Coordinates: 43.074278°N 89.405408°W
Part of the opposition to U.S. involvement in Vietnam
Sterling Hall
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, United States
Coordinates: 43.074278°N 89.405408°W
Date: August 24, 1970; 3:42 am (UTC-5)
Target: Army Mathematics Research Center, Sterling Hall, UWMadison
Attack type: Car bombing of a school building
Weapons: Car bomb (ammonium nitrate)
Deaths: 1
Injured: 3
Perpetrators: Karleton Armstrong, Dwight Armstrong, David Fine, and Leo Burt
Motive: Protest against the Vietnam War
The Sterling Hall bombing occurred on the University of WisconsinMadison campus on August 24, 1970, and was committed by four men as an action against the university's research connections with the U.S. military during the Vietnam War. It resulted in the death of a university physics researcher and injuries to three others.
Overview
Sterling Hall historical marker
Sterling Hall is a centrally located building on the University of WisconsinMadison campus. The bomb, set off at 3:42 am on August 24, 1970, was intended to destroy the Army Mathematics Research Center (AMRC) housed on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th floors of the building. It caused massive destruction to other parts of the building and nearby buildings as well. It resulted in the death of the researcher Robert Fassnacht, injured three others and caused significant destruction to the physics department and its equipment. Neither Fassnacht nor the physics department itself was involved with or employed by the Army Mathematics Research Center.
The bombers used a Ford Econoline van stolen from a University of Wisconsin professor of Computer Sciences. It was filled with close to 2,000 pounds (910 kg) of ANFO (i.e., ammonium nitrate and fuel oil). Pieces of the van were found on top of an eight-story building three blocks away and 26 nearby buildings were damaged; however, the targeted AMRC was scarcely damaged. Total damage to University of WisconsinMadison property was over $2.1 million ($14.7 million in 2022) as a result of the bombing.
Army Mathematics Research Center
Sterling Hall after the bombing
During the Vietnam War, the 2nd, 3rd and 4th floors of the southern (east-west) wing of Sterling Hall housed the Army Mathematics Research Center (AMRC). This was an Army-funded think tank, directed by J. Barkley Rosser, Sr.
The staff at the center, at the time of the bombing, consisted of about 45 mathematicians, about 30 of them full-time. Rosser was well known for his research in pure mathematics, logic (Rosser's trick, the KleeneRosser paradox, and the Church-Rosser theorem) and in number theory (Rosser sieve). Rosser had been the head of the U.S. ballistics program during World War II and also had contributed to research on several missiles used by the U.S. military.
The money to build a home for AMRC came from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) in 1955. Their money built a 6-floor addition to Sterling Hall. In the contract to work at the facility, it was required that mathematicians spend at least half their time on U.S. Army research.
Rosser publicly minimized any military role of the center and implied that AMRC pursued mathematics, including both pure and applied mathematics. The University of Wisconsin student newspaper, The Daily Cardinal, obtained and published quarterly reports that AMRC submitted to the Army. The Cardinal published a series of investigative articles making a convincing case that AMRC was pursuing research that was directly pursuant to specific U.S. Department of Defense requests, and relevant to counterinsurgency operations in Vietnam. AMRC became a magnet for demonstrations, in which protesters chanted "U.S. out of Vietnam! Smash Army Math!"
The Army Mathematics Research Center was phased out by the Department of Defense at the end of the 1970 fiscal year.
The bombers
FBI wanted posters published
shortly after the bombing
The bombers were Karleton Armstrong, Dwight Armstrong, David Fine, and Leo Burt. They called themselves the "New Year's Gang", a name which was derived from an exploit on New Year's Eve 1969. In that earlier attack, Dwight and Karl, with Karl's girlfriend, Lynn Schultz (who drove the getaway car), stole a small plane from Morey Field in Middleton. Dwight and Karl dropped homemade explosives on the Badger Army Ammunition Plant, but the explosives failed to detonate. They successfully landed the plane at another airport and escaped.
I still feel we can't rationalize someone getting killed, but at that time we felt we should never have done the bombing at all. Now I don't feel that way. I feel it was justified and should have been done. It just should have been done more responsibly.
Karleton Armstrong, in a 1986 interview
{snip}
Thu Aug 24, 2023: On this day, August 24, 1970, the Army Mathematics Research Center at UWisconsin was bombed.
erronis
(16,770 posts)Of course Kent State is well known for the fatalities during the protests.
I was at the University of Kansas and two students were shot by the National Guard. Our Computer Science department was also bombed but without loss of life or that level of devastation. I did have a bullet pass through my office window and lodge into the opposite wall - not sure if it was targeted or not.
Some of my work was funded by ARPA which can be viewed as not militaristic, but it still served the interests of the USGOV and eventually originated the internet. (I worked on two of the original message-processing units for the early prototypes.)
surfered
(2,791 posts)And blew my rental trailer away. When the phones started working again, I called my parents to let them know that I was Ok. They were relieved and said, by the way, your draft notice just came in the mail. So then. It was off to Basic Training at Ft Lewis, WA.