The
hippie subculture was
originally a youth movement that
began in the United
States
during the early 1960s and spread around the
world. The word hippie derives from
hipster, and was
initially used to describe beatniks who had
moved into San
Francisco
's Haight-Ashbury
district. These people inherited the
countercultural values
of the
Beat Generation, created
their own communities, listened to
psychedelic rock, embraced the
sexual revolution, and used drugs such as
marijuana and
LSD to explore alternative states
of consciousness.
In January
1967, the Human Be-In in Golden Gate
Park
in San Francisco
popularized hippie culture, leading to the
legendary Summer of Love on the
West Coast of the United
States, and the 1969 Woodstock Festival
on the East Coast. Hippies in Mexico
, known as
jipitecas, formed La Onda
Chicana and gathered at Avándaro, while in
New
Zealand
, nomadic housetruckers
practiced alternative lifestyles and promoted sustainable energy at
Nambassa. In the United Kingdom
, mobile "peace convoys" of New age travellers made summer pilgrimages to free music festivals at Stonehenge
. In Australia hippies
gathered at Nimbin
for the 1973 Aquarius
Festival and the annual Cannabis Law Reform Rally or MardiGrass. In Chile, "Festival
Piedra Roja" was held in 1970 (following
Woodstock's success), and was the major hippie event in that
country.
Hippie fashions and values had a major effect on culture,
influencing
popular music, television,
film, literature, and the arts. Since the 1960s, many aspects of
hippie culture have been assimilated by mainstream society. The
religious and
cultural diversity
espoused by the hippies has gained widespread acceptance, and
Eastern philosophy and spiritual
concepts have reached a wide audience. The hippie legacy can be
observed in contemporary culture in myriad forms — from
health food, to
music
festivals, to
contemporary sexual
mores, and even to the
cyberspace
revolution.
Etymology
Lexicographer
Jesse Sheidlower, the
principal American editor of the
Oxford English Dictionary, argues
that the terms
hipster and
hippie derive from the
word
hip, whose origins are
unknown. The term
hipster was coined by
Harry Gibson in 1940, in his
stage name "Harry the Hipster".
Hipster
was often used in the 1940s and 1950s to describe
jazz performers. The word
hippie is also jazz
slang from the 1940s, and one of the first recorded usages of the
word
hippie was in a radio show on November 13, 1945, in
which
Stan Kenton called
Harry Gibson, "Hippie". However, Kenton's use
of the word was playing off Gibson's nickname "Harry the Hipster."
Reminiscing about late 1940s Harlem
in his 1964
autobiography, Malcolm X referred to the
word hippy as a term that African Americans used to describe a
specific type of white man who "acted
more Negro than Negroes".
Although
the word hippie made isolated appearances during the early
1960s, the first clearly contemporary use of the term appeared in
print on September 5, 1965, in the article, "A New Haven for
Beatniks", by San Francisco
journalist Michael
Fallon. In that article, Fallon wrote about the Blue
Unicorn coffeehouse, using the term
hippie to refer to the new generation of beatniks who had
moved from North Beach
into the Haight-Ashbury
district. New
York Times editor and usage writer
Theodore M. Bernstein said the paper changed the
spelling from
hippy to
hippie to avoid the
ambiguous description of clothing as
hippy fashions.
History
Origins
The foundation of the hippie movement finds historical precedent as
far back as the counterculture of the
Ancient Greeks, espoused by philosophers like
Diogenes of Sinope and the
Cynics also as early forms of hippie culture.
Hippie philosophy also credits the religious and spiritual
teachings of
Jesus Christ,
Hillel the Elder,
Buddha,
St.
Francis of Assisi,
Henry David
Thoreau, and
Gandhi.
The first signs of what we would call modern "proto-hippies"
emerged in
fin de siècle Europe. Between 1896 and 1908, a German youth
movement arose as a countercultural reaction to the organized
social and cultural clubs that centered around German folk music.
Known as
Der Wandervogel
("migratory bird"), the movement opposed the formality of
traditional German clubs, instead emphasizing amateur music and
singing, creative dress, and communal outings involving hiking and
camping. Inspired by the works of
Friedrich Nietzsche,
Goethe,
Hermann Hesse,
and Eduard Baltzer, Wandervogel attracted thousands of young
Germans who rejected the rapid trend toward urbanization and
yearned for the pagan, back-to-nature spiritual life of their
ancestors. During the first several decades of the twentieth
century, Germans settled around the United States, bringing the
values of the Wandervogel with them. Some opened the first
health food stores, and many moved to
Southern California where they could practice an alternative
lifestyle in a warm climate. Over time, young Americans adopted the
beliefs and practices of the new immigrants. One group, called the
"Nature Boys", took to the California desert and raised organic
food, espousing a back-to-nature lifestyle like the Wandervogel.
Songwriter
Eden Ahbez wrote a hit song
called
Nature Boy
inspired by Robert Bootzin (
Gypsy
Boots), who helped popularize health-consciousness,
yoga, and
organic food in
the United States.
Like Wandervogel, the hippie movement in the United States began as
a youth movement. Composed mostly of white teenagers and young
adults between the ages of 15 and 25 years old, hippies inherited a
tradition of cultural dissent from
bohemian and
beatniks of
the
Beat Generation in the late
1950s. Beats like
Allen Ginsberg
crossed-over from the beat movement and became fixtures of the
burgeoning hippie and anti-war movements.
By 1965, hippies had
become an established social group
in the U.S., and the movement eventually expanded to other
countries, extending as far as the United Kingdom
and Europe, Australia,
Canada
, New Zealand
, Japan
, Mexico, and Brazil
.
The
hippie ethos influenced The Beatles and others in the United Kingdom
and other parts of Europe, and they in turn
influenced their American counterparts. Hippie culture
spread worldwide through a fusion of
rock
music,
folk,
blues, and
psychedelic
rock; it also found expression in literature, the dramatic
arts,
fashion, and the visual arts,
including film, posters advertising rock concerts, and
album covers. Self-described hippies had become a
significant minority by 1968, representing just under 0.2% of the
U.S. population before declining in the mid-1970s.
Along with the
New Left and the
American Civil Rights
Movement, the hippie movement was one of three dissenting
groups of the 1960s counterculture. Hippies rejected established
institutions, criticized
middle class
values, opposed
nuclear weapons and
the
Vietnam War,
embraced aspects of
Eastern
philosophy, championed
sexual
liberation, were often
vegetarian and
eco-friendly, promoted the
use of
psychedelic drugs which they
felt expanded one's consciousness, and created
intentional communities or communes.
They used alternative arts,
street
theatre,
folk music, and
psychedelic rock as a part of their
lifestyle and as a way of expressing their feelings, their protests
and their vision of the world and life. Hippies opposed political
and social orthodoxy, choosing a gentle and nondoctrinaire ideology
that favored peace, love and personal freedom, perhaps best
epitomized by
The Beatles' song
"
All You Need is Love". Hippies
perceived the dominant culture as a corrupt, monolithic entity that
exercised undue power over their lives, calling this culture
"
The Establishment", "
Big Brother", or
"
The Man". Noting that they were "seekers of
meaning and value", scholars like
Timothy
Miller describe hippies as a
new religious movement.
Early hippies (1960–1966)
During the early 1960s novelist
Ken Kesey
and The
Merry Pranksters lived
communally in California. Members included Beat Generation hero
Neal Cassady,
Ken
Babbs,
Carolyn Adams ,
Wavy Gravy,
Paul
Krassner,
Stewart Brand,
Del Close,
Paul Foster,
George Walker, Sandy Lehmann-Haupt and others.
Their early escapades were documented in
Tom
Wolfe's book
The
Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.
With Cassady at the
wheel of a school bus named Further,
the Merry Pranksters traveled across the United States to celebrate
the publication of Kesey's novel Sometimes a Great
Notion and to visit the 1964 World's Fair in New York City
. The Merry Pranksters were known for using
marijuana,
amphetamines, and
LSD, and
during their journey they "turned on" many people to these
drug. The Merry Pranksters filmed and
audiotaped their bus trips, creating an immersive multimedia
experience that would later be presented to the public in the form
of festivals and concerts.
Grateful
Dead wrote a song about the Merry Pranksters' bus trips called
"That's It For The Other One".
During
this period Greenwich
Village
in New York
City
and Berkeley, California
anchored the American folk music circuit.
Berkeley's two coffee houses, the Cabale Creamery and the
Jabberwock, sponsored performances by folk music artists in a beat
setting. In April 1963, Chandler A. Laughlin III, co-founder of the
Cabale Creamery, established a kind of tribal, family identity
among approximately fifty people who attended a traditional,
all-night
Native
American peyote ceremony in a rural
setting.
This ceremony combined a psychedelic experience with
traditional Native American spiritual values; these people went on
to sponsor a unique genre of musical expression and performance at
the Red Dog Saloon in the isolated, old-time mining town of
Virginia
City, Nevada
.
In the summer of 1965, Laughlin recruited much of the original
talent that led to a unique amalgam of traditional folk music and
the developing psychedelic rock scene. He and his cohorts created
what became known as "The Red Dog Experience", featuring previously
unknown musical acts —
Grateful Dead,
Jefferson Airplane,
Big Brother and the Holding
Company,
Quicksilver
Messenger Service,
The
Charlatans, and others — who played in the completely
refurbished, intimate setting of Virginia City's Red Dog Saloon.
There was no clear delineation between "performers" and "audience"
in "The Red Dog Experience", during which music, psychedelic
experimentation, a unique sense of personal style and Bill Ham's
first primitive light shows combined to create a new sense of
community. Laughlin and George Hunter of the Charlatans were true
"proto-hippies", with their long hair, boots and outrageous
clothing of nineteenth-century American (and Native American)
heritage. LSD manufacturer
Owsley
Stanley lived in Berkeley during 1965 and provided much of the
LSD that became a seminal part of the "Red Dog Experience", the
early evolution of psychedelic rock and budding hippie culture. At
the Red Dog Saloon, The Charlatans were the first psychedelic rock
band to play live (albeit unintentionally) loaded on LSD.
When they returned to San Francisco, Red Dog participants Luria
Castell, Ellen Harman and Alton Kelley created a collective called
"The Family Dog." Modeled on their Red Dog experiences, on October
16, 1965, the Family Dog hosted "
A Tribute
to Dr. Strange" at Longshoreman's Hall. Attended by
approximately 1,000 of the Bay Area's original "hippies", this was
San Francisco's first
psychedelic
rock performance, costumed dance and light show, featuring
Jefferson Airplane,
The Great Society and The Marbles. Two
other events followed before year's end, one at California Hall and
one at the Matrix. After the first three Family Dog events, a much
larger psychedelic event occurred at San Francisco's Longshoreman's
Hall. Called "The Trips Festival", it took place on January
21–January 23, 1966, and was organized by
Stewart Brand,
Ken
Kesey,
Owsley Stanley and others.
Ten thousand people attended this sold-out event, with a thousand
more turned away each night. On Saturday January 22, the
Grateful Dead and
Big Brother and the Holding
Company came on stage, and 6,000 people arrived to imbibe punch
spiked with LSD and to witness one of the first fully developed
light shows of the era.
By
February 1966, the Family Dog became Family Dog Productions under
organizer Chet Helms, promoting
happenings at the Avalon Ballroom
and the Fillmore
Auditorium
in initial
cooperation with Bill Graham. The
Avalon Ballroom, the Fillmore Auditorium and other venues provided
settings where participants could partake of the full psychedelic
music experience. Bill Ham, who had pioneered the original Red Dog
light shows, perfected his art of liquid light projection, which
combined light shows and film projection and became synonymous with
the San Francisco ballroom experience. The sense of style and
costume that began at the Red Dog Saloon flourished when San
Francisco's Fox Theater went out of business and hippies bought up
its costume stock, reveling in the freedom to dress up for weekly
musical performances at their favorite ballrooms. As
San
Francisco Chronicle music columnist
Ralph J. Gleason put it, "They danced all night
long, orgiastic, spontaneous and completely free form."
Some of
the earliest San Francisco hippies were former students at San
Francisco State College
who became intrigued by the developing psychedelic
hippie music scene. These students joined the bands they loved,
living communally in the large, inexpensive Victorian apartments in the Haight-Ashbury
. Young Americans around the country began
moving to San Francisco, and by June 1966, around 15,000 hippies
had moved into the Haight.
The
Charlatans, Jefferson
Airplane, Big
Brother and the Holding Company, and the Grateful Dead all moved to San Francisco's
Haight-Ashbury
neighborhood during this period. Activity
centered around the
Diggers, a
guerrilla street
theatre group that combined
spontaneous street theatre, anarchistic action, and
art happenings in their agenda to create a "free
city". By late 1966, the Diggers opened
free
stores which simply gave away their stock, provided free food,
distributed free drugs, gave away money, organized free music
concerts, and performed works of political art.
On October 6, 1966, the state of California declared LSD a
controlled substance, which made the drug illegal.
In response to the
criminalization of psychedelics, San Francisco hippies staged a
gathering in the Golden Gate Park panhandle
, called the Love
Pageant Rally, attracting an estimated 700–800 people.
As explained by Allan Cohen, co-founder of the
San Francisco Oracle, the purpose
of the rally was twofold: to draw attention to the fact that LSD
had just been made illegal — and to demonstrate that people who
used LSD were not criminals, nor were they mentally ill. The
Grateful Dead played, and some sources claim that LSD was consumed
at the rally. According to Cohen, those who took LSD "were not
guilty of using illegal substances...We were celebrating
transcendental consciousness, the beauty of the universe, the
beauty of being."
Summer of Love (1967)

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On
January 14, 1967, the outdoor Human
Be-In organized by Michael Bowen
helped to popularize hippie culture across the United States, with
20,000 hippies gathering in San Francisco's
Golden Gate
Park
. On March 26, Lou
Reed, Edie Sedgwick and 10,000
hippies came together in Manhattan
for the Central Park
Be-In on Easter Sunday.
The
Monterey Pop
Festival
from June 16 to June 18 introduced the rock music
of the counterculture to a wide audience and marked the start of
the "Summer of Love." Scott McKenzie's rendition of
John Phillips' song, "
San Francisco", became a hit in the
United States and Europe. The lyrics, "If you're going to San
Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair", inspired
thousands of young people from all over the world to travel to San
Francisco, sometimes wearing flowers in their hair and distributing
flowers to passersby, earning them the name, "
Flower Children." Bands like the
Grateful Dead,
Big Brother and the Holding
Company (with
Janis Joplin), and
Jefferson Airplane lived in the
Haight.
In June 1967,
Herb Caen was approached by
"a distinguished magazine" to write about why hippies were
attracted to San Francisco. He declined the assignment but
interviewed hippies in the Haight for his own newspaper column in
the
San Francisco
Chronicle. Caen determined that, "Except in their music,
they couldn't care less about the approval of the straight world."
Caen himself felt that the city of San Francisco was so straight
that it provided a visible contrast with hippie culture. On July 7,
Time magazine featured a
cover story entitled, "The Hippies: The Philosophy of a
Subculture." The article described the guidelines of the hippie
code: "Do your own thing, wherever you have to do it and whenever
you want. Drop out. Leave society as you have known it. Leave it
utterly. Blow the mind of every straight person you can reach. Turn
them on, if not to drugs, then to beauty, love, honesty, fun." It
is estimated that around 100,000 people traveled to San Francisco
in the summer of 1967. The media was right behind them, casting a
spotlight on the Haight-Ashbury district and popularizing the
"hippie" label. With this increased attention, hippies found
support for their ideals of love and peace but were also criticized
for their anti-work, pro-drug, and permissive ethos.
By the end of the summer, the Haight-Ashbury scene had
deteriorated. The incessant media coverage led the Diggers to
declare the "death" of the hippie with a parade.
According to the late
poet Susan 'Stormi' Chambless, the hippies buried an effigy of a
hippie in the Panhandle
to demonstrate the end of his/her reign.
Haight-Ashbury could not accommodate the influx of crowds (mostly
naive youngsters) with no place to live. Many took to living on the
street, panhandling and drug-dealing. There were problems with
malnourishment, disease, and drug addiction. Crime and violence
skyrocketed. By the end of 1967, many of the hippies and musicians
who initiated the Summer of Love had moved on. Misgivings about the
hippie culture, particularly with regard to
drug abuse and lenient morality, fueled the
moral panics of the late 1960s.
Revolution (1967–1970)
By 1968, hippie-influenced fashions were beginning to take off in
the mainstream, especially for youths and younger adults of the
populous "
Baby Boomer" generation, many
of whom may have aspired to emulate the hardcore movements now
living in tribalistic communes, but had no overt connections to
them. This was noticed not only in terms of clothes and also longer
hair for men, but also in music, film, art, and literature, and not
just in the US, but around the world.
Eugene McCarthy's brief presidential
campaign successfully persuaded a significant minority of young
adults to "get clean for Gene" by shaving their beards or wearing
lower miniskirts; however the "Clean Genes" had little impact on
the popular image in the media spotlight, of the hirsute hippy
adorned in beads, feathers, flowers and bells.
The
Yippies, who were seen as an offshoot of the hippie movements
parodying as a political party, came to national attention during
their celebration of the 1968 spring equinox, when some 3,000 of
them took over Grand Central Station
in New York — eventually resulting in 61
arrests. The Yippies, especially their leaders
Abbie Hoffman and
Jerry
Rubin, became notorious for their theatrics, such as trying to
levitate the Pentagon at the October 1967 war protest, and such
slogans as "Rise up and abandon the creeping meatball!" Their
stated intention to protest the
1968 Democratic National
Convention in Chicago in August, including nominating their own
candidate, "
Lyndon Pigasus Pig"
(an actual pig), was also widely publicized in the media at this
time.

Hippies relaxing at the 1969 Woodstock
Festival
In April
1969, the building of People's Park
in Berkeley, California received international
attention. The University
of California, Berkeley
had demolished all the buildings on a parcel near
campus, intending to use the land to build playing fields and a
parking lot. After a long delay, during which the site
became a dangerous eyesore, thousands of ordinary Berkeley
citizens, merchants, students, and hippies took matters into their
own hands, planting trees, shrubs, flowers and grass to convert the
land into a park. A major confrontation ensued on May 15, 1969,
when Governor
Ronald Reagan ordered
the park destroyed, which led to a two-week occupation of the city
of Berkeley by the
United
States National Guard.
Flower power
came into its own during this occupation as hippies engaged in acts
of
civil disobedience to plant
flowers in empty lots all over Berkeley under the slogan "Let A
Thousand Parks Bloom".
In August
1969, the Woodstock
Music and Art Fair
took place in Bethel, New York
, which for many, exemplified the best of hippie
counterculture. Over 500,000 people arrived to hear the most
notable musicians and bands of the era, among them
Richie Havens,
Joan
Baez,
Janis Joplin,
The Grateful Dead,
Creedence Clearwater Revival,
Crosby, Stills, Nash
& Young,
Carlos Santana,
The Who,
Jefferson Airplane, and
Jimi Hendrix.
Wavy
Gravy's Hog Farm provided security and
attended to practical needs, and the hippie ideals of love and
human fellowship seemed to have gained real-world expression.
In
December 1969, a similar event took place in Altamont,
California
, about 30 miles (45 km) east of San
Francisco. Initially billed as "Woodstock West", its
official name was The Altamont Free Concert
. About 300,000 people gathered to hear
The Rolling Stones;
Crosby, Stills, Nash and
Young;
Jefferson Airplane and
other bands. The
Hells Angels provided
security that proved far less benevolent than the security provided
at the Woodstock event: 18-year-old
Meredith Hunter was stabbed and killed
during The Rolling Stones' performance.
Aftershocks (1970–present)
By the 1970s, the 1960s
zeitgeist that had
spawned hippie culture seemed to be on the wane.
The events at
Altamont
Free Concert
shocked many Americans, including those who had
strongly identified with hippie culture. Another shock came
in the form of the
Sharon Tate and
Leno and Rosemary
LaBianca murders committed in August 1969 by
Charles Manson and his "family" of followers.
Nevertheless, the turbulent political
atmosphere that featured the bombing of Cambodia
and shootings by National Guardsmen at
Jackson State University
and Kent State
University
still brought people together. These
shootings inspired the May 1970 song by
Quicksilver Messenger Service
"What About Me?", where they sang, "You keep adding to my numbers
as you shoot my people down", as well as
Neil
Young's "
Ohio", recorded by
Crosby, Stills,
Nash and Young.
Much of hippie style had been integrated into
mainstream American society by the early 1970s.
Large
rock concerts that originated with the 1967 Monterey Pop
Festival
and the 1968 Isle
of Wight Festival became the norm. In the mid-1970s,
with the end of the draft and the Vietnam
War, a renewal of patriotic sentiment
associated with the approach of the United States Bicentennial and
the emergence of punk in London
and
New
York
, the mainstream media lost interest in the hippie
counterculture. Acid rock gave way to
heavy metal,
disco,
and
punk rock.
Starting in the late 1960s, hippies began to come under attack by
working class
skinheads. Hippies were also
vilified and sometimes attacked by
punks,
revivalist
mods,
greasers, football
casual,
Teddy boys and members of other youth subcultures
of the 1970s and 1980s. Hippie ideals had a marked influence on
anarcho-punk and some
post-punk youth subcultures, especially during the
second summer of love.
While many hippies made a long-term commitment to the lifestyle,
some younger people argue that hippies "sold out" during the 1980s
and became part of the materialist, consumer culture. Although not
as visible as it once was, hippie culture has never died out
completely: hippies and neo-hippies can still be found on college
campuses, on communes, and at gatherings and festivals. Many
embrace the hippie values of peace, love, and community, and
hippies may still be found in
bohemian
enclaves around the world.
Ethos and characteristics
Hippies sought to free themselves from societal restrictions,
choose their own way, and find new meaning in life. One expression
of hippie independence from societal norms was found in their
standard of dress and grooming, which made hippies instantly
recognizable to one another, and served as a visual symbol of their
respect for individual rights. Through their appearance, hippies
declared their willingness to question authority, and distanced
themselves from the "
straight" and
"
square" (i.e., conformist) segments
of society.
At the same time, many thoughtful hippies distanced themselves from
the very idea that the way a person dresses could be a reliable
signal of who he was, especially after outright criminals, like
Charles Manson, began to adopt hippie
personas, and also after plainclothes policemen started to "dress
like hippies" in order to harass legitimate members of the
counter-culture.
Frank Zappa
admonished his audience that "we all wear a uniform": the San
Francisco clown/hippie Wavy Gravy said in
1987 that he could still see fellow-feeling in the eyes of Market
Street
businessman who'd dressed conventionally to
survive.
As in the beat movement preceding them, and the
punk movement that followed soon after, hippie
symbols and iconography were purposely borrowed from either "low"
or "primitive" cultures, with hippie fashion reflecting a
disorderly, often
vagrant style.
As with other adolescent, white middle-class movements,
deviant behavior of the hippies involved
challenging the prevailing
gender
differences of their time: both men and women in the hippie
movement wore jeans and maintained long hair, and both genders wore
sandals or went
barefoot. Men often wore
beards, while women wore little or no makeup, with many going
braless.
Hippies often chose brightly colored clothing and wore unusual
styles, such as
bell-bottom pants, vests,
tie-dyed garments,
dashikis,
peasant blouses, and long, full skirts; non-Western inspired
clothing with Native American, Asian, Indian, African and Latin
American motifs were also popular. Much of hippie clothing was
self-made in defiance of corporate culture, and hippies often
purchased their clothes from flea markets and second-hand shops.
Favored accessories for both men and women included Native American
jewelry, head scarves, headbands and
long
beaded necklaces. Hippie homes, vehicles and other possessions
were often decorated with
psychedelic
art.
Travel
Travel, domestic and international, was a prominent feature of
hippie culture, becoming (in this communal process) an extension of
friendship. School busses similar to Ken Kesey's
Further, or the iconic VW bus, were popular
because groups of friends could travel on the cheap. The
VW Bus became known as a counterculture and hippie
symbol, and many buses were repainted with graphics and/or custom
paint jobs — these were predecessors to the modern-day
art car. A
peace symbol
often replaced the Volkswagen logo. Many hippies favored
hitchhiking as a primary mode of transport
because it was economical,
environmentally friendly, and a way
to meet new people.

Hand-crafted Hippie Truck, 1968
Hippies
tended to travel light and could pick up and go wherever the action
was at any time; whether at a "love-in" on Mount
Tamalpais
near San
Francisco, a demonstration against the Vietnam War in Berkeley, one
of Ken Kesey's "Acid Tests", or if the
"vibe" wasn't right and a change of scene was desired, hippies were
mobile at a moment's notice. Pre-planning was eschewed as
hippies were happy to put a few clothes in a backpack, stick out
their thumbs and hitchhike anywhere. Hippies seldom worried whether
they had money, hotel reservations or any of the other standard
accoutrements of travel. Hippie households welcomed overnight
guests on an impromptu basis, and the reciprocal nature of the
lifestyle permitted freedom of movement. People generally
cooperated to meet each other's needs in ways that became less
common after the early 1970s." This way of life is still seen among
the
Rainbow Family groups,
new age travellers and New Zealand's
housetruckers.A derivative of this
free-flow style of travel were hippie trucks and buses,
hand-crafted mobile houses built on truck or bus chassis to
facilitate a nomadic lifestyle as documented in the 1974 book
Roll Your Own (see also
Housetrucker). Some of these mobile gypsy
houses were quite elaborate with beds, toilets, showers and cooking
facilities.
On the West Coast, a unique lifestyle developed around the
Renaissance Faires that Phyllis and Ron
Patterson first organized in 1963.

Hippie Truck interior
During the summer and fall months, entire families traveled
together in their trucks and buses, parked at Renaissance Pleasure
Faire sites in Southern and Northern California, worked their
crafts during the week, and donned Elizabethan costume for weekend
performances and to attend booths where handmade goods were sold to
the public.
The sheer number of young people living at the time made for
unprecedented travel opportunities to special happenings.
The peak
experience of this type was the Woodstock Festival
near Bethel, New York
, from August 15 to 19, 1969, which drew over
500,000 people.
One travel experience, undertaken by hundreds of thousands of
hippies between 1969–1971, was the
Hippie
trail overland route to India. Carrying little or no luggage,
and with small amounts of cash, almost all followed the same route,
hitch-hiking across Europe to Athens and on to Istanbul, then by
train through central Turkey via Erzurum, continuing by bus into
Iran, via Tabriz and Tehran to Mashad, across the Afghan border
into Herat, through southern Afghanistan via Kandahar to Kabul,
over the Khyber Pass into Pakistan, via Rawalpindi and Lahore to
the Indian frontier.
Once in India, hippies went to many
different destinations but gathered in large numbers on the beaches
of Goa
, or crossed
the border into Nepal
to spend
months in Kathmandu
. In Kathmandu, most of the hippies hung out
in tranquil surrounding of a place called Freak Street (
Nepal Bhasa: Jhoo Chhen) which still exists near
Kathmandu Durbar Square.
Politics
The
peace symbol was developed in the
UK as a logo for the
Campaign for Nuclear
Disarmament, and was embraced by U.S. anti-war protestors in
the 1960s.]]Hippies were often
pacifists
and participated in non-violent political demonstrations, such as
civil
rights marches, the
marches on Washington
D.C., and
anti–Vietnam
War demonstrations, including
draft card burnings and
the
1968
Democratic National Convention protests. The degree of
political involvement varied widely among hippies, from those who
were active in peace demonstrations to the more anti-authority
street theater and demonstrations of the
Yippies, the most politically
active hippie sub-group.
Bobby Seale
discussed the differences between Yippies and hippies with
Jerry Rubin who told him that Yippies were the
political wing of the hippie movement, as hippies have not
"necessarily become political yet". Regarding the political
activity of hippies, Rubin said, "They mostly prefer to be stoned,
but most of them want peace, and they want an end to this
stuff."
In addition to non-violent political demonstrations, hippie
opposition to the Vietnam War included organizing political action
groups to oppose the war, refusal to serve in the military and
conducting "
teach-ins" on college campuses
that covered Vietnamese history and the larger political context of
the war.
Scott McKenzie's 1967 rendition of John Phillips' song "
San
Francisco ", which helped inspire the hippie Summer of Love,
became a homecoming song for all Vietnam veterans arriving in San
Francisco from 1967 on.
McKenzie has dedicated every American
performance of "San Francisco" to Vietnam veterans, and he sang at
the 2002 20th anniversary of the dedication of the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial
. "San Francisco" became a freedom song
worldwide, especially in Eastern
European nations that suffered under Soviet
-imposed
communism.
Hippie political expression often took the form of "dropping out"
of society to implement the changes they sought. Politically
motivated movements aided by hippies include the
back to the land movement of the
1960s,
cooperative business enterprises,
alternative energy, the
free press movement, and
organic farming.
The political ideals of the hippies influenced other movements,
such as
anarcho-punk,
rave culture,
green
politics,
stoner culture and the
new age movement.
Penny Rimbaud of the English anarcho-punk band
Crass said in interviews, and in an essay
called
The Last Of The Hippies, that Crass was formed in
memory of his friend,
Wally Hope. Rimbaud
also said that Crass were heavily involved with the hippie movement
throughout the 1960s and Seventies, with
Dial
House being established in 1967. Many
punks were often critical of
Crass for their involvement in the hippie movement.
Like Crass,
Jello Biafra was influenced
by the hippie movement and cited the yippies as a key influence on
his political activism and thinking, though he did write songs
critical of hippies.
Drugs

Tahquitz Canyon, Palm Springs,
California, 1969, sharing a joint
Following in the well-worn footsteps of the Beats, the hippies also
used
cannabis (marijuana),
considering it pleasurable and benign. They enlarged their
spiritual pharmacopeia to include
hallucinogen such
as LSD,
psilocybin, and
mescaline.
On the East Coast of the United
States, Harvard
University
professors Timothy
Leary, Ralph Metzner and Richard Alpert (Ram Dass) advocated psychotropic
drugs for psychotherapy,
self-exploration, religious and
spiritual use. Regarding LSD, Leary
said, "Expand your consciousness and find ecstasy and revelation
within."
On the
West Coast of the
United States,
Ken Kesey was an
important figure in promoting the recreational use of psychotropic
drugs, especially LSD, also known as "acid." By holding what he
called "
Acid Tests", and touring the
country with his band of
Merry
Pranksters, Kesey became a magnet for media attention that drew
many young people to the fledgling movement. The
Grateful Dead (originally billed as "The
Warlocks") played some of their first shows at the Acid Tests,
often as high on LSD as their audiences. Kesey and the Pranksters
had a "vision of turning on the world." Harder drugs, such as
amphetamines and heroin were also used
in hippie settings; however, these drugs were often disdained, even
among those who used them, because they were recognized as harmful
and addictive.
Legacy
The legacy of the hippie movement continues to permeate Western
society. In general, unmarried couples of all ages feel free to
travel and live together without societal disapproval. Frankness
regarding sexual matters has become more common, and the rights of
homosexual,
bisexual and
transsexual
people, as well as people who choose not to categorize themselves
at all, have expanded. Religious and cultural diversity has gained
greater acceptance. Co-operative business enterprises and creative
community living arrangements are more accepted than before. Some
of the little hippie
health food stores
of the 1960s and 1970s are now large-scale, profitable businesses,
due to greater interest in natural foods, herbal remedies, vitamins
and other nutritional supplements. Author
Stewart Brand argues that the development and
popularization of the
Internet finds one of
its primary roots in the anti-authoritarian ethos promoted by
hippie culture.
Distinct appearance and clothing was one of the immediate legacies
of hippies worldwide.. During the 1960s and 1970s, mustaches,
beards and long hair became more commonplace and colorful, while
multi-ethnic clothing dominated the fashion world. Since that time,
a wide range of personal appearance options and clothing styles,
including nudity, have become more widely acceptable, all of which
was uncommon before the hippie era. Hippies also inspired the
decline in popularity of the
necktie and
other
business clothing, which had been unavoidable for
men during the 1950s and early 1960s.
Astrology, including everything from
serious study to whimsical amusement regarding personal traits, was
integral to hippie culture.
Culture
The hippie legacy in literature includes the lasting popularity of
books reflecting the hippie experience, such as
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid
Test. In music, the
folk rock and
psychedelic rock popular among
hippies evolved into genres such as
acid
rock,
world beat and
heavy metal music.
Psychedelic trance (also known as
psytrance) is a type of
electronic
music music influenced by 1960s psychedelic rock. The tradition
of hippie music festivals began in the United States in 1965 with
Ken Kesey's
Acid Tests, where the
Grateful Dead played tripping on
LSD and initiated psychedelic jamming. For the
next several decades, many hippies and neo-hippies became part of
the
Deadhead community, attending music and
art festivals held around the country. The
Grateful Dead toured continuously, with few
interruptions between 1965 and 1995.
Phish and
their fans (called
Phish Heads) operated in the same
manner, with the band touring continuously between 1983 and 2004.
Many contemporary bands performing at hippie festivals and their
derivatives are called
jam bands, since
they play songs that contain long instrumentals similar to the
original hippie bands of the 1960s.
With the demise of Grateful Dead and Phish, nomadic touring hippies
attend a growing series of summer festivals, the largest of which
is called the
Bonnaroo Music
& Arts Festival, which premiered in 2002.
The Oregon
Country Fair
is a three-day festival featuring hand-made crafts,
educational displays and costumed entertainment. The annual
Starwood Festival, founded in
1981, is a six-day event indicative of the spiritual quest of
hippies through an exploration of non-mainstream religions and
world-views, and has offered performances and classes by a variety
of hippy and counter-culture icons.
The
Burning
Man
festival began in 1986 at a San Francisco beach
party and is now held in the Black Rock Desert
northeast of Reno, Nevada
. Although few participants would accept the
hippie label, Burning Man is a contemporary expression of
alternative community in the same spirit as early hippie events.
The gathering becomes a temporary city (36,500 occupants in 2005),
with elaborate encampments, displays, and many
art cars.
Other events that enjoy a large attendance
include the Rainbow Family
Gatherings, Community Peace Festivals and the Woodstock
Festivals
.
In the UK, there are many
new age
travellers who are known as hippies to outsiders, but prefer to
call themselves the
Peace Convoy. They
started the
Stonehenge Free
Festival in 1974, but
English
Heritage later banned the festival, resulting in the
Battle of the Beanfield in 1985.
With
Stonehenge banned as a festival site, new age travellers gather at
the annual Glastonbury Festival
.
In
New
Zealand
between 1976 and 1981 tens of thousands of hippies
gathered from around the world on large farms around Waihi
and
Waikino
for music and alternatives festivals. Named
Nambassa, the festivals focused on
peace, love, and a balanced lifestyle. The events featured
practical
workshops and displays
advocating
alternative
lifestyles,
self sufficiency,
clean and
sustainable energy and
sustainable living.
In the UK and Europe, the years 1987 to 1989 were marked by a
large-scale revival of many characteristics of the hippie movement.
This later movement, composed mostly of people aged 18 to 25,
adopted much of the original hippie philosophy of love, peace and
freedom. The summer of 1988 became known as the
Second Summer of Love. Although the
music favored by this movement was modern
electronic music, especially
house music and
acid
house, one could often hear songs from the original hippie era
in the
chill out rooms at
raves.
In the
UK, many of the well-known figures of this movement first lived
communally in Stroud Green
, an area of north London located in Finsbury
Park.
Popular films depicting the hippie ethos and lifestyle include
Woodstock,
Easy Rider,
Hair,
The
Doors,
Across
the Universe and
Crumb.
In 2002, photojournalist John Bassett McCleary published a
650-page, 6,000-entry unabridged
slang
dictionary devoted to the language of the hippies titled
The Hippie Dictionary: A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1960s and
1970s. The book was revised and expanded to 700 pages in 2004.
McCleary believes that the hippie counterculture added a
significant number of words to the English language by borrowing
from the lexicon of the
Beat
Generation, through the hippies' shortening of beatnik words
and then popularizing their usage.
Notes
- http://members.aye.net/~hippie/hippie/special_.htm
- .
- .
- .
- NBC studios live radio program, the Jubilee show at
Billy Berg's jazz club in Hollywood, CA, and recorded through the
transcription service of the Armed Forces Radio Corps (AFRC), and
available on the CD "Stan Kenton And Friends", 2006.
- . "A few of the white men around Harlem, younger ones whom we
called 'hippies', acted more Negro than Negroes. This particular
one talked more 'hip' talk than we did."
- .
- .
- . See also: .
- Zablocki, Benjamin. "Hippies." World
Book Online Reference Center. 2006. Retrieved on 2006-10-12.
"Hippies were members of a youth movement...from white middle-class
families and ranged in age from 15 to 25 years old."
- .
- . Hirsch describes hippies as: "Members of a cultural protest
that began in the U.S. in the 1960s and affected Europe before
fading in the 1970s...fundamentally a cultural rather than a
political protest."
- . Pendergast writes: "The Hippies made up the...nonpolitical
subgroup of a larger group known as the counterculture...the
counterculture included several distinct groups...One group, called
the New Left...Another broad group called...the Civil Rights
Movement...did not become a recognizable social group until after
1965...according to John C. McWilliams, author of The 1960s
Cultural Revolution."
- .
- August 28 - Bob Dylan turns The Beatles on to cannabis for the
first time. See also: ; .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- Yippie Abbie Hoffman envisioned
a different society: "...where people share things, and we don't
need money; where you have the machines for the people. A free
society, that's really what it amounts to... a free society built
on life; but life is not some Time Magazine, hippie
version of fagdom... we will attempt to build that society..." See:
Swatez, Gerald. Miller, Kaye. (1970). Conventions: The Land Around Us Anagram
Pictures. University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. Social Sciences
Research Film Unit. qtd at ~16:48. The speaker is not explicitly
identified, but it is thought to be Abbie Hoffman.
- : "Seven hundred million people heard it in a worldwide TV
satellite broadcast. It became the anthem of flower power that
summer...The song expressed the highest value of the
counterculture...For the hippies, however, it represented a call
for liberation from Protestant culture, with its repressive sexual
taboos and its insistence on emotional restraint...The song
presented the flower power critique of movement politics:
there was nothing you could do that couldn't be done by others;
thus you didn't need to do anything...John was arguing not only
against bourgeois self-denial and future-mindedness but also
against the activists' sense of urgency and their strong personal
commitments to fighting injustice and oppression..."
- .
- Theme appears in contemporaneous interviews throughout
Yablonsky (1968).
- .
- . Timothy
Miller notes that the counterculture was a "movement of seekers
of meaning and value...the historic quest of any religion." Miller
quotes Harvey Cox,
William C. Shepard, Jefferson Poland, and Ralph J. Gleason in
support of the view of the hippie movement as a new religion. See
also Wes Nisker's
The Big Bang, The Buddha, and the Baby Boom: "At its core,
however, hippie was a spiritual phenomenon, a big, unfocused,
revival meeting." Nisker cites the San Francisco Oracle,
which described the Human Be-In as a "spiritual revolution".
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- The college was later renamed San Francisco State
University.
- . Perry writes that SFSC students rented cheap,
Edwardian-Victorians in the Haight.
- .
- .
- .
- .
- "Chronology of San Francisco Rock 1965-1969
- DeCurtis, Anthony. (July 12, 2007). "New York". Rolling
Stone. Issue 1030/1031; For additional sources, see McNeill,
Don, " Central Park Rite is Medieval Pageant", The
Village Voice, 30 March. 1967: pg 1, 20; Weintraub, Bernard,
"Easter: A Day of Worship, a "Be-In" or just Parading in the Sun",
The New York Times, 27 March. 1967: pg 1, 24.
- .
- SFGate.com. Archive. Herb Caen, June 25, 1967. Small thoughts at large. Retrieved on
June 4, 2009.
- .
- .
- .
- "The Politics of Yip", TIME Magazine, Apr.
5, 1968
- .
- Bugliosi (1994) describes the popular view that the Manson case
"sounded the death knell for hippies and all they symbolically
represented", citing Joan Didion, Diane Sawyer, and Time. Bugliosi admits that although the Manson
murders "may have hastened" the end of the hippie era, the era was
already in decline.
- http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=208_1226021428
-
http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/on-this-day/On-This-Day--Deaths-at-Rolling-Stones--Altamont-Concert-Shocks-the-Nation.html
- .
- .
-
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iS4hsxKiMNgC&pg=PA188&lpg=PA188&dq=Hippie+bashing+by+skinheads&source=bl&ots=7-cIEELuoQ&sig=_bBCvN9b4-O7lcXB6XBUiaM1rDc&hl=en&ei=___QSdnyBMHRjAeMybDKCQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result#PPA189,M1
- http://www.eelpie.org/epd_19.htm
-
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,909318-1,00.html
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- http://www.mrsharkey.com/busbarn/rollown/rollown.htm
- .
- . .
- .
- .
-
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/festivals/article1994608.ece
- http://www.hipplanet.com/books/atoz/atoz.htm
- .
- Pendergast, Sara. (2004) Fashion, Costume, and
Culture. Volume 5. Modern World Part II: 1946-2003. Thomson
Gale. ISBN 0-7876-5417-5
- Connikie, Yvonne. (1990). Fashions of a Decade: The
1960s. Facts on File. ISBN 0-8160-2469-3
- Pendergast, Sara. (2004) Fashion, Costume, and
Culture. Volume 5. Modern World Part II: 1946–2003. Thomson
Gale. ISBN 0-7876-5417-5
- The musical Hair
and a multitude of well known contemporary song lyrics such as
The Age of Aquarius
- .
- Nambassa: A New Direction, edited by Colin Broadley and Judith
Jones, A. H. & A. W. Reed, 1979.ISBN 0589012169
- . .
- .
References
- Binkley, Sam. (2002). Hippies. St. James Encyclopedia of Pop
Culture. FindArticles.com.
- .
- Brand, Stewart. (Spring, 1995). We
Owe it All to the Hippies. Time.
- .
- .
- Gaskin, Stephen. (1970). Monday Night Class. The Book
Farm. ISBN 1-57067-181-8.
- .
- .
- .
- .
- Kent, Stephen A. (2001).
From slogans to mantras: social protest and religious
conversion in the late Vietnam war era. Syracuse
University
Press. ISBN 0-8156-2923-0
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- Mecchi, Irene. (1991). The Best of Herb Caen, 1960–75.
Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0020-2
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- .
- Young, Shawn David. (2005). Hippies, Jesus Freaks, and
Music. Ann Arbor: Xanedu/Copley Original Works. ISBN
1-59399-201-7
Further reading and resources
External links