There are a number of reasons the National Guard may be called to duty in the United States, including to help after disasters and provide security for events.
A president mobilizing the Guard to respond to a situation, however, is rare. In January 2017, President Trump threatened in a tweet to “send in the Feds!” in response to violence in Chicago. Ultimately, he didn’t.
National Guard historians, in response to a request by the Tribune, listed about a dozen since the enactment of the Armed Forces Reserve Act in 1952, when the Guard was called into duty and operated under the control of the president. Many of these incidents were during the turbulent civil rights struggles in the 1960s.
“Prior to the recent federal activation of California National Guard troops in Los Angeles, the last time a state’s National Guard was federalized over the objections of a governor was 1965, when President Lyndon B. Johnson federalized the Alabama National Guard over the objections of segregationist Gov. George Wallace to protect civil rights demonstrators against violence,” Lt. Col. Bradford Leighton, public affairs officer at the Illinois National Guard, wrote in an email to the Tribune.
This list doesn’t include the many times the Guard was activated by a governor and operated under state control, and, in about half of the examples below, the governor of the state asked for help.
Desegregation of Little Rock school (1957-58)
In this Sept. 26, 1957, file photo, members of the 101st Airborne Division take up positions outside Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. (AP)
On Sept. 23, 1957, President Dwight Eisenhower signed an executive order sending troops from the Army’s 101st Airborne Division to maintain order and peace during the integration of Central High School by nine Black students in Little Rock, Ark. Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus earlier called in the state National Guard to bar Black students from the school.
Integration of University of Mississippi (1962)
James Meredith, center right, is escorted by federal marshals as he appears for his first day of class at the University of Mississippi, in Oxford, Miss., on Oct. 1, 1962. Meredith sued to gain admission as the first Black student at the state’s flagship university. Facing resistance from the governor and riots that led to two deaths, Meredith enrolled at Ole Miss under federal court order and was protected by U.S. marshals. (AP)
Riots erupted on the campus of the University of Mississippi in Oxford on Sept. 30, 1962, when James Meredith, a Black Air Force veteran, attempted to integrate the all-white school. Despite the presence of more than 120 federal marshals who were on hand to protect Meredith from harm, the crowd turned violent. The next morning, two civilians were dead and scores more were reported injured. After spending the night of Sept. 30 under federal protection, Meredith was allowed to register for classes the following morning, and became the first Black graduate from the university in August 1963.
Integration of University of Alabama (1963)
In this June 11, 1963 file photo, Gov. George Wallace blocks the entrance to the University of Alabama as he turned back a federal officer attempting to enroll two Black students at the university campus in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (AP)
On May 16, 1963, a federal district court in Alabama ordered the University of Alabama to admit two African-American students. Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who had made a campaign promise to prevent the integration even if he had to stand in the schoolhouse door, temporarily blocked the students’ entrance by doing just that June 11, 1963. He ultimately yielded when President John F. Kennedy federalized Alabama’s National Guard.
Integration of Alabama schools (1963)
Sonnie Hereford IV, 6, holds his father’s hand as he arrives for his second day of integrated classes at Fifth Avenue Elementary School in Huntsville, Ala., on Sept. 10, 1963. There were no incidents. Sonnie was turned away from the same school by Alabama state troopers. (AP)
Although the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1954 decision in Brown vs. the Board of Education found racial segregation of children in public schools violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, it did not immediately eliminate it. Segregation didn’t end in Alabama public schools until 1963, when Sonnie Hereford IV became one of four Black children to enroll in a previously all-white public school in Huntsville, Ala., following a court order.
Selma to Montgomery civil rights march (1965)
Martin Luther King, Jr. and civil rights marchers cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., heading for the capitol in Montgomery, Ala., on March 21, 1965. King began the march under federal protection, which grew by thousands by the time they arrived at the state capital. (AP)
On March 7, 1965, which became known as “Bloody Sunday,” peaceful protesters led by John Lewis were beaten by local police as they tried to cross Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led more than 3,000 marchers across the same bridge two weeks later and continued on a 54-mile trek to Montgomery, the state’s capital, under the watchful protection of the recently federalized Alabama National Guard. The five-day march, one of the seminal moments in civil rights history, led to the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965.
Detroit riots (1967)
Some Michigan National Guard equipment rolls out of Detroit on Aug. 1, 1967, after civil unrest subsided. A woman weeps quietly as she heads for a funeral. Tanya Lynn Blanding, 4, was killed, apparently by a police or National Guard bullet, during the height of the burning, looting and killing. Her funeral was held with some 200 mourners attending. (Alvan Quinn/AP)
Ignited when Detroit’s nearly all-white police force arrested several Black revelers at an after-hours drinking club in the early morning on July 23, 1967, the riot triggered a devastating period of violence in the city that left 43 people dead and millions of dollars in property destroyed. Thousands of Army troops and National Guardsmen were called to the city.
Chicago riots following assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (1968)
Chicago police got out of a squad car after it was hit by gunfire on Larabee Street, south of Division Street, during the rioting on April 6, 1968. (Steve Lasker / Chicago’s American)
On April 4, 1968, the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn. As the tragic news spread, riots and looting took place in cities including New York, Washington, Nashville, Tenn., and Raleigh, N.C. In Chicago on the first night of rioting, nine people, all Black, were killed.
Tribune headline on April 6, 1968, says Report 9 Slain In Rioting; 3,000 Guardsmen Patroling Streets Daley Pleads for an End to Violence. (Chicago Tribune)
On Saturday, with the approval of Mayor Richard J. Daley, the Army was called in and thousands of troops descended on the city’s troubled areas. When the fires died out, 162 buildings had been destroyed, 12 people killed and 3,000 arrested.
Washington riots following King’s murder (1968)
U.S. Marines move along 8th Street near M Street in southeast Washington on April 6, 1968. The Marines were among some 12,500 troops ordered into the city as new fires flared and looters roamed the streets. (Bob Schutz/AP)
In the days following King’s assassination 13,600 troops occupied Washington, according to The Washington Post, the most to occupy a U.S. city since the Civil War. When news spread of King’s murder, looting and rioting broke out across the city.
Baltimore riots following King’s murder (1968)
One of four Black men arrested by police in down Baltimore on April 8, 1968, spreads his arms wide. William A. Smith, Associated Press photographer, said he saw police confiscate whiskey bottles filled with gasoline. It was one of the first instances of arrests downtown, which has escaped three days of violence in the city. (AP)
Riots following King’s assassination devastated Baltimore for two weeks. Six were killed, dozens injured, and fires and looting caused damage. Thousands of National Guard troops were deployed across the city.
New York City postal strike (1970)
A soldier, foreground, handles bulk mail, as other GIs place letters in coops at the General Post Office in New York on March 24, 1970, in the wake of President Nixon’s order for federal troops to help sort out the city’s strike-bound postal facilities. (AP)
During a strike of U.S. postal workers involving 152,000 workers in 671 locations across the country. President Richard Nixon called in the National Guard to help get the mail moving in one of the hardest-hit areas: New York City. The strike concerned what the unions saw as a small pay raise. The strike lasted for two weeks, the military mail helpers were considered ineffective and the postal workers got their raise.
Looting after Hurricane Hugo (1989)
In this Sept. 20, 1989 file photo, Sid Kalmas stands guard over his damaged hotel in Christiansted, U.S. Virgin Islands, after Hurricane Hugo slammed the island chain. The storm destroyed 85% of the buildings in St. Croix and caused $1 billion in damage to Puerto Rico before making landfall in South Carolina. Hurricane Hugo might have been the first modern U.S. storm ushering in an era of live TV coverage and large scale coastal evacuations. (Steve Helber/AP)
President George H.W. Bush called in the National Guard to restore order on the island of St. Croix of the U.S. Virgin Islands. Looting and racial tension broke out following devastating damage from Hurricane Hugo. The storm damage buried the island in rubble, destroying most homes and knocking out communications. Bush sent in 1,100 heavily armed troops.
Riots after Rodney King verdict (1992)
Looters mill in the parking lot of the ABC Market in South Central Los Angeles on April 30, 1992, as violence continued following the verdicts in the Rodney King assault case on. Looters plundered businesses and torched buildings in brazen daytime assaults. National Guard troops moved in the next day. (Paul Sakuma/AP)
Arson, violence and looting broke out across Los Angeles following the not-guilty verdicts in all but one assault charge in the video-taped police beating of Rodney King. During the violence, 2,000 reserve soldiers were activated. During six days of rioting, more than 60 people were killed and more than 2,000 people were injured.
Immigration protests in Los Angeles (2025)
National Guard soldiers are posted near an entrance to the Federal Building in Los Angeles during a demonstration in response to a series of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids throughout the country, on Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (Gabrielle Lurie/San Francisco Chronicle via AP)
Trump ordered the deployment of nearly 5,000 troops, including National Guard and Marines, to the nation’s second-largest city. They were deployed to protect federal buildings but also immigration agents as they carried out arrests.
Sources: National Guard, Civil Rights Digital Library at the University of Georgia, Stanford University, University of Baltimore, U.S. Postal Service, National Park Service, Chicago Tribune archives, Associated Press archives, Washington Post archives, Baltimore Sun archives
Originally Published: August 28, 2025 at 8:07 AM CDT