The boycott escalated quickly. Nine thousand out of 45,000 elementary school students in the county were kept home from school. Thousands of miners, bus drivers, and trucking workers joined in the boycott. The Department of Education called for a compromise, but Reverend Horan denounced them, demanding that the boycott continue until the books were permanently removed and the supporting members of the school board fired. Bombs were planted at an elementary school and a school board building; another elementary school was dynamited, school buses were attacked with shotguns, and rocks were thrown at the homes of children who continued to attend school during the boycott. Alice Moore herself fled town during this time. Reverend Charles Quigley asked Christians to "pray that God will kill the giants who have mocked and made fun of dumb fundamentalists", leading one student to point out, "They're shooting people because they don't want to see violence in books." Kanawha's sheriff asked for state troopers to be sent in, but West Virginia Governor
Arch A. Moore, Jr. denied the request. Schools were closed several times to avoid further violence. The West Virginia-based neo-Nazi magazine
The Liberty Bell of
George Dietz was heavily involved in the controversy; according to scholar Carol Mason, they were notable for discussing it in an explicitly racialized way. The magazine published several writings during the controversy, including an influential essay, "A Message to All True Sons of Appalachia", which argued
White Anglo-Saxon Protestants were under attack. Mason argued this was "explicitly racialized argument that went beyond the conspiracist populism that characterizes so many other curriculum disputes". She wrote that the textbook controversy was a turning point for Dietz, who changed to "relinquishing the John Birch Society’s anticommunist rhetoric and his promotion of an explicit anti-Semitic discourse instead", declaring "the Jew" as the enemy. The white supremacist West Virginia periodical
Attack! also discussed the affair extensively, with a similar line to
The Liberty Bell. Between 1974 and 1975, several people, including Marvin Horan, were prosecuted and imprisoned on charges related to the bombings, effectively ending the demonstration. In the fall of 1975, the school board restored the full line of books that they had approved before to all county schools. ==Legacy==