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Soon afterwards, Kehoe took his own life and four bystanders, including the school superintendent Emory Huyck, by detonating dynamite in his truck as he sat parked in front of the school while rescue workers searched through the rubble.
The next morning, Kehoe's wife was found dead at their farm, apparently killed by Kehoe on the day of the blast. He had also rigged explosives which burned down his house and other buildings on the farm before the school blast.
Apparently, Kehoe had spent much of that spring stringing wires and hiding dynamite in the basement of the 300-student school. Kehoe did not arouse any suspicion because he was known as a penny-pincher on the school board, and people assumed he was doing work himself to save the cost of hiring an electrician.
The school explosion made front page headlines of national newspapers, sharing the page with news of Charles Lindbergh's trans-Atlantic flight. Michigan Governor Fred Green created the Bath Relief Fund, and people from across the country expressed their sympathies and offered financial support. James Couzens, philanthropist and U.S. Senator from Michigan, gave generously to the fund, and on August 18, 1928, the new school built on the same site was dedicated as the "James Couzens Agricultural School".
In 1975 the James Couzens Agricultural School was torn down and replaced by a new High School, east of Bath.