Posters like this flooded the Bay Area. |
Some
writers have dubbed it the beginning to the Hippie Era. It was more like
a coming out party for a counterculture that
had been developing in the Bay Area
for more than a decade.
The Human Be-In held on January 14, 1967 in
San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park attracted
as many as 20,000 people and got the attention of the national media as nothing
else before it. That night’s network
television news shows featured film of the event that beamed into perplexed
homes across the country. That
semi-official reflection of American culture
LIFE magazine affirmed its
significance with a photo spread.
Soon
Scott McKenzie’s Are You Coming to San Francisco would hit the air waves and
kids from across the continent would head to Haight-Ashbury for the Summer
of Love. By spring similar events
were popping up around the country.
Chicago’s first Be-In would be held at The Point near the 57th Street Beach by Hyde
Park in April. But the one held on May 14 in Lincoln Park and promoted by the Seed
turned into a regular event every Sunday that year and again the following
summer right up to when the park was taken over for the Democratic Convention protests in August.
The
San Francisco Be-In was the brainchild of 30 year old Michael Bowen, an artist and sculptor who had connections to the
established Beat culture and who
dabbled in mysticism. According to poet Andrew Cohen who co-founded the
pioneering counter culture paper the San Francisco Oracle with him, Bowen
hopped to unite different cultural elements in the Bay Area—the Beats with
their interest in mysticism, Berkley radicals
who were powering the growing Anti-war
movement, and the relatively a-political Hippie culture in San Francisco
with its fascination with hallucinogens
and rock and roll. He hoped for an event with would meld and
synthesize these sometimes contradictory currents.
The
catalyst for the event was a new California
law which went into effect in October 1966 which made the possession and
use of LSD a crime for the first
time. Brown envisioned an event where
the law would be challenged by massive, open defiance. He created the term Human Be-In as a
synthesis of Humanism and the civil disobedience of Civil Rights Movement lunch counter sit-ins.
The
event was promoted heavily in the Oracle
as A
Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In and featured on
the cover of its fifth edition printed in an eye-catching purple ink. Flyers and posters distributed at music
venues like the Fillmore, Beat
coffee houses and bookstores, and on the streets generated excitement.
The
program was impressive. Beat mainstays Allan Ginsberg and Gary Snyder were on hand to lend support and lead meditations. Former Harvard
professor Dr. Timothy Leary,
already famous for his advocacy of LSD, made his first West Coast appearance and for the first time urged his audience to “tune in, turn on, and drop out.” With
him was his associate Richard Alpert, who
would soon emerge as the guru Ram Das.
Radical
political figures including the comedian/Civil Rights activist Dick Gregory and student organizer Jerry Rubin spoke. The only woman on the program, Lenore
Kandel, read erotic poetry
from The Love Book, her four poem pamphlet that was at the
center of a celebrated censorship case.
The program was energized by performances by some
of the top bands of the emerging psychedelic
rock scene—Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and The Grateful Dead.
The Hell’s
Angels were on hand to provide “security” and even conducted an operation
to reunite lost children with their parents.
Hugh Romney and the Hog Farm were there to provide
food—brown rice and veggies. All of the
classic elements of the counter culture were gathered together for the first
time in one event.
Most critically, the guerrilla chemist Owsley
Stanley brought thousands of doses of powerful White
Lighting Acid which he had manufactured just for the occasion and which was
distributed freely to the crowd.
Inspired by the Be-In and Scott McKenzie’s song more
than 100,000 kids descended on the overwhelmed Haight. Despite the best efforts of locals to
accommodate them, most ended up on the street and many were pray for sexual
exploitation, violence, and hard drugs like heroin. By fall the organizers of the Be-In were
eager to send a new message—don’t come to San Francisco. Instead they wanted to young people to stay
in their own towns and created community and social movements there.
So on October 6, 1967 The
Death of the Hippie was
staged as a mock funeral in the Haight.
By
that time, however, pop culture had appropriated the Hippie and characters were
popping up on television shows and in movies.
Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In premiered in January 1968.
In
the boonies, kids still wanted to be Hippies.
They grew their hair long, smoked dope, dropped acid, and listened
endlessly to rock and roll. At the same
time the escalating Viet Nam War and
police repression of protests were radicalizing many. In early ’68 Rubin and Abbie Hoffman would create the Yippies
out of thin air to politicize the counter culture as never before.
The
rest, as they say, is history.
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