Texas Tower shooting of 1966 Article

Texas Tower shooting of 1966 summary

Learn about the Texas Tower shooting and its significance to the history of mass killings in the United States

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Texas Tower shooting of 1966, also called University of Texas clock tower shooting, (Aug. 1, 1966) Mass shooting in Austin, Texas, in which Charles Joseph Whitman, a student and ex-marine, fired down from the clock tower on the campus of the University of Texas, killing 14 people and wounding 31 others before he was shot and killed by police. The mentally unstable Whitman took the lives of his wife and mother before beginning his rampage. The incident was one of the worst mass murders in a public area in the history of the U.S. and the first to unfold “live” in the era of mass media. Many sources identify the Texas Tower shooting as the first mass murder in American history, but some academics and researchers have argued that dozens of such shootings took place in the United States between the beginning of the 20th century and Whitman’s assault. What set the event apart was the instantaneousness of its coverage on radio and television by reporters on the scene who described the events as they happened.