Story

Oklahoma City and the Cost of Violence

AH article image

Authors: Calvin Warner

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Winter 2025 | Volume 70, Issue 1

The bombing in Oklahoma City caused massive damage to the Murrah Building and claimed TK lives. FEMA
The bombing in Oklahoma City caused massive damage to the Alfred Murrah Federal Building, claimed 168 innocent lives, and injured over 700 people. FEMA

Editor's Note: Calvin Warner grew up in Edmond, Oklahoma. He is now a practicing attorney in Austin, Texas and an adjunct professor at St. Edward’s University.

I remember the windows rattling. As a child in the suburb of Edmond, about 15 miles north of downtown, our house shook with the blast. The story would draw international headlines: the most deadly terrorist attack on American soil, a title it would hold for six years. Terror had come to Oklahoma City.

Today, a beautiful museum stands on the site of the blast, chronicling the attack, the apprehension of the terrorist and remembering the lives lost. I was moved to tears (not somber man-tears either) by a charred keychain, emblazoned with the face of Eskimo Joe, an Oklahoma icon and the mascot of a restaurant chain endemic to Stillwater, my college town.

It is only human to process tragedy in terms of ourselves, and it is unnatural, upon death in one’s own tribe, to maintain the cosmopolitan perspective. The event has been a part of my reality since my youth, and in such cases it is often hard to separate and analyze something in a new way. But recurrent violence in my country, from school shootings to presidential assassination attempts, invites a remembrance of the toll of anarchy.

Recurrent violence in the United States, from school shootings to presidential assassination attempts, invites a remembrance of the Oklahoma City bombing.

The Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, named in memory of a prominent Oklahoma judge, was home to several government agencies, and perhaps most famously, a daycare. A truck parked outside the building was filled with almost 5,000 pounds of combustible materials, and was detonated at 9:02 AM. 168 people were killed, though an unmatched leg caused some investigators to place the death toll at 169. Hundreds more were injured, hundreds of buildings were damaged, and hundreds of millions in property damage was incurred in an instant. Among the dead were 19 children, 99 government employees, and one rescue worker who was struck later by shifting debris.

Shortly after the attacks, President Bill Clinton headlined a memorial service in Oklahoma City. He offered condolences on behalf of the American people and promised swift justice to the then-unknown terrorists.

“You have lost too much, but you have not lost everything. You have certainly not lost America, for we will stand with you, for as many tomorrows as it takes.”

FBI sketch (left) and McVeigh (right)
The FBI issued a sketch of the suspected bomber, and Timothy McVeigh was arrested shortly after. FBI

Very few tomorrows were required. Though the full resources of the United States government would have been available to