This year, 2017, is the 50th
anniversary of the Summer of Love.
In January of 1967, a "Be-In"
took place in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.
"If you're going to San Francisco,...
be sure to wear some flowers in your hair...
If you're going to San Francisco,...
summertime will be a love-in there."
(Song lyrics by The Mamas and The Papas in May of 1967)
A counterculture of long-haired
rebellious youth, called hippies, was emerging in the Haight-Ashbury district
and the news media loved it. During spring break, college students began
pouring into the San Francisco Bay Area.
Soon, an estimated 100,000 young people
from around the world had flocked to the scene to frolic in a spontaneous
free-for-all.
On June 1, 1967, four mop-haired lads
from Liverpool, England, who called themselves The Beatles, released their
latest album, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
It became a certified Gold album on the
first day of its release -- it was also the unofficial start of what was about
to become the Summer of Love.
"All you need is love." John
Lennon
On June 16, a three-day International
Pop Music Festival opened in Monterey, south of San Francisco. It was the
world's first major rock festival. Over 200,000 people attended the event. Some
of the 32 performers and groups included:
- Janis Joplin
- Jimi Hendrix
- The Mamas and the Papas
- Canned Heat
- The Grateful Dead
- Jefferson Airplane
- Otis Redding
- Lou Rawls
- Simon and Garfunkel
- Johnny Rivers
- Buffalo Springfield
- Quicksilver Messenger Service
- Paul Butterfield Blues Band
- Country Joe and the Fish
- Moby Grape
- Booker T and the MGs
- The Byrds
- The Who
- The Association
- Eric Burton and the Animals
- others
And if you don't know who most of those
folks are, I pity you. There's some great music in this crowd.
Elsewhere in the world, it was anything
but a summer of love that year. During the summer of 1967, the Vietnam Conflict
was going strong.
I was in a U.S. Army uniform in Atlanta
at the time, doing my best to maintain my sanity as a draftee until I could become
a civilian once again.
On June 5, The Six-Day War erupted.
Israel, fearing an imminent attack,
struck Egyptian military targets. Jordan, Syria and Iraq soon entered the
conflict. Israel annexed Arab East Jerusalem, captured the Golan Heights (from
Syria), the Gaza Strip, the West Bank (from Jordan) and the Sinai (from Egypt).
It ended in six days.
In the middle of the Six Day War,
Israel attacked the USS Liberty, a U.S. Navy ship stationed in the
Mediterranean Sea, killing 34 and wounding 171 crewmen. Apparently, Israel mistook
it for an Egyptian vessel.
Commander William L. McGonagle was
awarded the Medal of Honor for remaining on the bridge and keeping the ship
afloat for 17 hours despite multiple wounds.
Israel apologized and paid $12 million
in compensation.
On July 6, the Biafran War erupted in
eastern Nigeria in Africa. It stemmed from rebellion against ethnic cleansing
(mass murder) by government forces and would last more than two years, claiming
some 600,000 lives.
Race riots were a popular sport that
summer.
- June 2 -- Boston, Mass.
- June 11 -- Tampa, Fla.
- June 27 -- Buffalo, NY (14 shot, 200 arrested)
- July 12 -- Newark, NJ (27 killed, 1,500 injured)
- July 17 -- Cairo, Ill.
- July 19 -- Durham, NC
- July 20 -- Memphis, Tenn.
- July 23 -- Detroit, Mich. (40 dead, 2,000 injured)
- July 24 -- Cambridge, Md.
- July 30 -- Milwaukee, Wis. (4 killed).
On July 29, 134 servicemen were killed
on the USS Forrestal in the Gulf of Tonkin off the coast of Vietnam.
On July 30, Gen. William Westmoreland
declared we were winning in Vietnam but needed more troops.
On August 3, President Lyndon Johnson
authorized 45,000 more troops to be sent to Vietnam.
The hippies in San Francisco weren't
particularly concerned with problems elsewhere. It was their summer of love.
But the fun soon ended. Overcrowding,
crime, homelessness and drug problems overwhelmed the quickly deteriorating
Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. Most of the students returned home to resume
college studies.
On October 7, those remaining in the
Bay Area held a mock "Death to the Hippie" funeral.
The Summer of Love was over.
For me, the Summer of Love was in 1968.
I became a civilian again and kissed the ground when I got home.
Several years later, I spent a few
weeks roaming around San Francisco -- fabulous city.
I even caught Janis Joplin playing a
gig in a church basement during some sort of fund raising event. She sent
enough electricity through the place to light the Fisherman's Warf and the
Golden Gate Bridge.
"Oh Lord, won't you buy me a
Mercedes Benz." Janis Joplin
But my inclination for a reclusive
lifestyle eventually sent me back on the road.
Love is the only sane answer to human
existence -- it's not so much gazing into each other's eyes, but looking
together in the same direction.
It's the art of persistence and endless
forgiveness. To find someone who will love you for no reason is the ultimate
bliss. It's when the happiness of another becomes essential to your own
happiness.
I have plenty of love these days -- I
have three wonderful dogs and a couple of imaginary girlfriends, named Tequila
Mockingbird and Trixie "Boom Boom" O'Toole, who are always there when
needed.
___________
Quote for the Day – "To fear love is
to fear life." Bertrand Russell
___________
Bret Burquest is the author of 12 books. He lives in the Ozark
Mountains, in the Land of Ark, where all the beautiful people live and time
stands still.
___________
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