СƬƵ

‘Perseverance Is Going to Have to Be Part of the Process’

Laura Davis is a witness to history, a founding director of the May 4 Visitors Center and Woman of the Year

СƬƵ Professor Emerita of English, Laura Davis, Ph.D., was recently named a “,” through the Women’s History Project of the Summit County Historical Society. Established in the early 1980s, this award recognizes women in the community for their exceptional contributions.

Allison Caplan, director, May 4 Visitors Center.
Alison Caplan, director, May 4 Visitors Center

Alison Caplan, director of СƬƵ’s May 4 Visitors Center nominated Davis for the honor. She said that the Summit County Historical Society recognizes that the events of May 4, 1970, in Kent were more than a Summit County story. “It obviously is something that has impacted every aspect of our region and the globe,” Caplan said.

Caplan said that after working as the director of the May 4 Visitors Center for two-and-a-half years, “you really understand the kind of perseverance that digging into the story of May 4 – and getting things done – requires, especially on a university campus and in academia. It takes a special kind of person.”

Laura Davis and Carole Barbato.
From left: Laura Davis, Ph.D., and Carole Barbato, Ph.D.

“A special kind of person,” and perseverance. Caplan said that in choosing a Woman of the Year honoree, the historical society considers different attributes like initiative, pioneering, inspiration, imagination, faith, creativity and perseverance. “It’s the perseverance required to build something like this,” she said. “It’s part of the May 4 story, the national historic site, the outdoor tour, the steps taken over 40 years to keep the story alive. That kind of perseverance.”

“Laura experienced May 4 firsthand but also has her career roots here and was the person who was able to accomplish this along with Carole,” she said. Carole Barbato, Ph.D., was an educator and researcher in communication studies at СƬƵ at East Liverpool. She and Davis were co-founders of the May 4 Visitors Center in 2012. Barbato passed away in 2014.

Laura Davis in 1973.
Laura Davis in the 1970s

Fall 1969: A ‘Very Shy’ First-Year Student Arrives at СƬƵ

Arriving on the Kent Campus for Fall Semester in late September 1969 was a defining moment for Davis. She was 17 years old and describes herself as “very shy” and “very quiet.” But Davis saw her transition from high school to college as “the beginning of finding a way toward doing something important, because that’s what I was really looking for.” 

She said, “I wanted to be here because I wanted to be with people who were concerned with things that mattered. That’s what I thought.”

Young Laura Davis in her Brownie uniform.
A young Laura Davis in her Brownie uniform.

Davis said that even though she was shy and quiet, “I did have the kind of alertness and was searching for something, searching for meaning and trying to learn more about the Vietnam War.” While growing up in South Euclid/Lyndhurst, she said that before coming to СƬƵ, she had closely followed news about the war, and the civil rights movement, reading anything she could find in the newspapers that came to her home and LIFE Magazine. “I wanted to learn the things that I needed to know about that so I could understand it, know what I was talking about, and be clear on ‘why’ if somebody asked me why I was opposed to the war,” Davis said. “I wanted to be able to explain that.”

 

 

The Moratorium March at СƬƵ, Oct. 15, 1969.
The Moratorium March at СƬƵ, Oct. 15, 1969.

 

Remembering Her First Protest

When she speaks with people about getting involved and becoming active in their community, she encourages people to “take that first step.” Davis’ “first step” came shortly after she arrived on campus when she heard about a planned march that was going to gather on the Commons behind what was then the Student Union (now Ritchie Hall).

"The Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam" march in Kent on Oct. 15, 1969 was in response to a call for nationwide demonstration and "teach in" by the Vietnam Moratorium Committee. 

The Moratorium March at СƬƵ, Oct. 15, 1969.
The Moratorium March at СƬƵ, near Eastway, on Oct. 15, 1969. 

 

“I walked down to the Commons by myself,” she said. “There was already a long line forming already. They were gathering there and then they were going to head downtown.”

“I went to the end of the line, and it just so happened that it was where the veterans – the veterans who had just come back from Vietnam – were already organizing,” Davis said.

At the time, the veterans on campus had a small office in the Student Union, near the university bookstore. “You would see these guys, they wore the green army jackets, and they were the people who would become the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. They weren’t called that yet, but they were the makings of that group,” she said.

Allison Kraus at The Moratorium March in Kent, Oct. 15, 1969
Allison Kraus, one of the four students who died on May 4, 1970, carried the banner on the Moratorium March on Oct. 15, 1969. 

 

Other anti-war organizations at СƬƵ had been dissolved when the university banned the Students for Democratic Society, one of the strongest student activist groups on campus. Davis said that the veterans at СƬƵ became the foundation of a new kind of organization. “I went to the end of the line, I could tell that the people were those veterans that I had seen before, and one of the guys gave me a bandana with a stamp on it,” she said. “I stepped into the line behind them and that was the first protest I participated in.”

Laura Davis coming up from The Commons on May 4, 1970.
Laura Davis (center) walking up from The Commons on May 4, 1970. 

 

From Spring 1970 to the Opening of the May 4 Visitors Center

Davis was an eyewitness to the events leading up to the tragedy of May 4, 1970, at СƬƵ. Like everyone on campus that day, the experience stayed with her and fueled her drive to find a way to preserve that history for future generations. 

After she completed her undergraduate studies at СƬƵ, she continued her studies to earn her master’s degree and then her doctorate. She joined СƬƵ’s faculty, teaching a course called May 4, 1970, and Its Aftermath, with Barbato. Davis also collaborated on numerous publications about May 4, including “,” and “”

Laura Davis and her family when she earned her doctoral degree.
Laura Davis celebrating the completion of her doctoral degree with her husband, Tom Clapper and her two sons, Jeff and Jesse.

 

Davis was working in the Office of the Provost at СƬƵ when she began working on creating the May 4 Visitors Center. In her position in that office, she felt she was in the right place to undertake the task. “There were so many things that were in my purview,” Davis said. “I knew everybody who had to be contacted and also what it would take.” 

On The Grid photo of the May 4 Visitors Center.

 

Finding the Right Space

One of the first steps to creating the May 4 Visitors Center was finding a space to house it. Davis said that process took about two years in moving people and offices in a way that would be agreeable to everyone. There were two options for the location of the center; one at the front of Taylor Hall and the other in the location that it is now.

“Everyone working toward a May 4 Visitors Center was happy to have two good locations to choose from and decided on the the location with the view from Taylor Hall over the Commons,” she said. “We felt it was a tribute to the students who has worked in that space and, thankfully, went out on May 4 to record the facts of what happened."

On The Grid photo of the May 4 Visitors Center.
Inside the May 4 Visitors Center.

 

When Davis visited Washington, D.C., and toured the Holocaust Museum, what she saw there reinforced the choice of the visitors center’s home. “At the end of the Holocaust Museum, you walk out into a large, quiet space, feeling very charged in the moment,” Davis said.

“That silence allows you to reflect on what you’ve learned, what you’ve witnessed,” she said.  “And I realized from that  – feeling the space – that it was something really important.”

Laura Davis on Daffodil Hill

 

“And I realized that if we had this location in Taylor Hall, then somebody could go out the door and go to the memorial right there and that would be our open space, for reflection,” Davis said.

The visitor center project gained momentum around the 40th annual commemoration of May 4 in 2010. Davis said that she and Barbato were waiting and working through all the starts and stops along the way. While working on her doctoral degree, Davis said she learned that you have to work on these kinds of large projects for a long, long time, and that’s where perseverance becomes important.

Students touring the May 4 Visitors Center.
Student groups from across the country tour the May 4 Visitors Center. 

 

The Need for Perseverance 

Davis sees the echoes of May 4 in the recent protests and deaths in Minnesota. She talked about this when she addressed the Summit County Historical Society after receiving their Woman of the Year Award. She talked about events from America’s history as a nation that were the prelude to May 4, like the Boston Massacre of 1770 and other historical connections. She also talked about the importance of communities. 

“What we have to do is not just protest, but we need to support the community that we’re in and other communities, because if we want to make positive change in our world with our protest, then we’re going to have to do it together,” Davis said. 

She said that she felt “energized” to see large numbers of people involved in the “No Kings” protests and said that people seeking to promote positive change don’t need to travel to Washington, D.C., for every protest but can work in their communities at a grassroots level. “I know that perseverance is going to have to be part of the process,” Davis said.

Laura Davis inside the May 4 Visitors Center.

 

‘We Need to See the Pattern That We Have in Our History’

“It’s incumbent upon us, and this comes from the national historic landmark wisdom – we need to see the pattern we have in our history,” Davis said. “We have to support our community, and we have to be alert. We have to look for that pattern.” The patterns, she said, are the injustices that keep happening, looking back through history, all the way back to the Boston Massacre. She said, “If you don’t understand history, it will repeat,” Davis said. “We must remember and we must carry on."

Davis said getting involved begins with that first step, like that first step when she joined the end of the line before the Moratorium march in October 1969.

“I would encourage anybody to take that step. If you have been thinking about something or if it just happened right then and you want to do something positive in your world, whatever it is – do it – because there are a lot of things that need to be worked on,” she said.

 

Storyteller’s note: I’ve known Laura Davis for more than 15 years and I am as much in awe of her spirit, perseverance and accomplishments as I am happy to call her a friend. Thank you, Laura. 

POSTED: Monday, April 27, 2026 12:41 PM
Updated: Tuesday, April 28, 2026 05:33 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Phil B. Soencksen
PHOTO CREDIT:
Rami Daud, Bob Christy, The personal collection of Laura Davis, СƬƵ Libraries Special Collections and Archives, On The Grid City Guides