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词条 Haight-Ashbury
释义

  1. Location

  2. History

     Farms, entertainment, and homes  Depression and war  Postwar  Hippie community  Recent history 

  3. Attractions and characteristics

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. Further reading

  7. External links

  8. Geographic situation within San Francisco

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Haight-Ashbury is a district of San Francisco, California, named for the intersection of Haight and Ashbury streets. It is also called The Haight and The Upper Haight.[6] The neighborhood is known for being the origin of the hippie counterculture.

Location

The district generally encompasses the neighborhood surrounding Haight Street, bounded by Stanyan Street and Golden Gate Park on the west, Oak Street and the Golden Gate Park Panhandle on the north, Baker Street and Buena Vista Park to the east and Frederick Street and Ashbury Heights and Cole Valley neighborhoods to the south.[7]

The street names commemorate two early San Francisco leaders: pioneer and exchange banker Henry Haight,[8] and Munroe Ashbury, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors from 1864-70.[9]

Both Haight and his nephew, as well as Ashbury, had a hand in the planning of the neighborhood and, more importantly, nearby Golden Gate Park at its inception. The name "Upper Haight", used by locals, is in contrast to the Haight-Fillmore or Lower Haight district; the latter being lower in elevation and part of what was previously the principal African-American and Japanese neighborhoods in San Francisco's early years.{{citation needed|date=July 2018}}

The Haight-Ashbury district is noted for its role as a center of the 1960s hippie movement. The earlier bohemians of the beat movement had congregated around San Francisco's North Beach neighborhood from the late 1950s. Many who could not find accommodation there turned to the quaint, relatively cheap and underpopulated Haight-Ashbury.[10]

The Summer of Love (1967), the 1960s era as a whole, and much of modern American counterculture have been synonymous with San Francisco and the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood ever since.

History

Farms, entertainment, and homes

Before the completion of the Haight Street Cable Railroad in 1883, what is now the Haight-Ashbury was a collection of isolated farms and acres of sand dunes. The Haight cable car line, completed in 1883, connected the east end of Golden Gate Park with the geographically central Market Street line and the rest of downtown San Francisco. As the primary gateway to Golden Gate Park, and with an amusement park known as the Chutes[11] on Haight Street between Cole and Clayton Streets between 1895 and 1902[12] and the California League Baseball Grounds stadium opening in 1887, the area became a popular entertainment destination, especially on weekends. The cable car, land grading and building techniques of the 1890s and early 20th century later reinvented the Haight-Ashbury as a residential upper middle class homeowners' district.[13] It was one of the few neighborhoods spared from the fires that followed the catastrophic San Francisco earthquake of 1906.[14]

Depression and war

The Haight was hit hard by the Depression, as was much of the city. Residents with enough money to spare left the declining and crowded neighborhood for greener pastures within the growing city limits, or newer, smaller suburban homes in the Bay Area. During the housing shortage of World War II, large single-family Victorians were divided into apartments to house workers. Others were converted into boarding homes for profit. By the 1950s, the Haight was a neighborhood in decline. Many buildings were left vacant after the war. Deferred maintenance also took its toll, and the exodus of middle class residents to newer suburbs continued to leave many units for rent.

Postwar

In the 1950s, a freeway was proposed that would have run through the Panhandle, but due to a citizen freeway revolt, it was cancelled in a series of battles that lasted until 1966.[15][16]{{page needed|date=May 2016}}

The Haight Ashbury Neighborhood Council (HANC) was formed at the time of the 1959 revolt.[17]

The Haight-Ashbury's elaborately detailed, 19th century, multi-story, wooden houses became a haven for hippies during the 1960s,[18] due to the availability of cheap rooms and vacant properties for rent or sale in the district; property values had dropped in part because of the proposed freeway.[19]

The bohemian subculture that subsequently flourished there took root, and to a great extent, has remained to this day.[20]

Hippie community

The mainstream media's coverage of hippie life in the Haight-Ashbury drew the attention of youth from all over America. Hunter S. Thompson labeled the district "Hashbury" in The New York Times Magazine, and the activities in the area were reported almost daily.[21] The Haight-Ashbury district was sought out by hippies to constitute a community based upon counterculture ideals, drugs, and music. This neighborhood offered a concentrated gathering spot for hippies to create a social experiment that would soon spread throughout the nation.[22]

The first ever head shop, Ron and Jay Thelin's Psychedelic Shop, opened on Haight Street on January 3, 1966, offering hippies a spot to purchase marijuana and LSD, which was essential to hippie life in Haight-Ashbury.[23] Along with businesses like the coffee shop The Blue Unicorn, the Psychedelic Shop quickly became one of the unofficial community centers for the growing numbers of freaks, heads, and hippies migrating to the neighborhood in 1966-67.[24] The entire hippie community had easy access to drugs, which was perceived as a community unifier.[25]

Another well-known neighborhood presence was the Diggers, a local "community anarchist" group known for its street theater, formed in the mid to late 1960s. The Diggers believed in a free society and the good in human nature. To express their belief, they established a free store, gave out free meals daily, and built a free medical clinic, which was the first of its kind, all of which relied on volunteers and donations.[26] The Diggers were strongly opposed to a capitalistic society; they felt that by eliminating the need for money, people would be free to examine their own personal values, which would provoke people to change the way they lived to better suit their character, and thus lead a happier life.[27]

During the 1967 Summer of Love, psychedelic rock music was entering the mainstream, receiving more and more commercial radio airplay. The Scott McKenzie song "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," became a hit that year. The Monterey Pop Festival in June further cemented the status of psychedelic music as a part of mainstream culture and elevated local Haight bands such as the Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company, and Jefferson Airplane to national stardom. A July 7, 1967, Time magazine cover story on "The Hippies: Philosophy of a Subculture," an August CBS News television report on "The Hippie Temptation"[28] and other major media interest in the hippie subculture exposed the Haight-Ashbury district to enormous national attention and popularized the counterculture movement across the country and around the world.

The neighborhood's fame reached its peak as it became the haven for a number of psychedelic rock performers and groups of the time. The members of Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, and Janis Joplin, all lived close to the intersection. They not only immortalized the scene in song, but also knew many within the community.[29]

The Summer of Love attracted a wide range of people of various ages: teenagers and college students drawn by their peers and the allure of joining a cultural utopia; middle-class vacationers; and even partying military personnel from bases within driving distance. The Haight-Ashbury could not accommodate this rapid influx of people, and the neighborhood scene quickly deteriorated. Overcrowding, homelessness, hunger, drug problems, and crime afflicted the neighborhood. Many people left in the autumn to resume their college studies.[27] On October 6, 1967, those remaining in the Haight staged a mock funeral, Digger happening, "The Death of the Hippie" ceremony.[30] Mary Kasper explained the message of the mock funeral as:

{{quote|We wanted to signal that this was the end of it, don't come out. Stay where you are! Bring the revolution to where you live. Don't come here because it's over and done with.[31]}}

Recent history

After 1968, the area went into decline due to "an influx of hard drugs and a lack of police presence,"[32][33] but was improved and renewed in the late 1970s.[34]

The Haight Ashbury was the origin of several communities and movements, including The Farm and the Rainbow Family. The Haight was at one point the home to hundreds of intentional communities, although few lasted and many moved outside the area. The last hippie commune with a continuous presence there may have been Kerista Commune.

In the 1980s, the Haight became an epicenter for the San Francisco comedy scene when a small coffee house off Haight Street called The Other Café at 100 Carl Street[35] (currently the restaurant Crepes on Cole) became a full-time comedy club that helped launch the careers of Robin Williams, Dana Carvey, and Whoopi Goldberg.[36] From the 1980s to the early 1990s, the I-Beam nightclub on Haight Street became a hotspot for modern rock dance music in San Francisco, and a popular venue for live performances by new wave, punk, industrial and indie bands.

Attractions and characteristics

The Red Victorian hotel is a popular attraction. An independent theater of the same name operated about a block away from the hotel from 1980 to 2011.[37]

The Haight-Ashbury Street Fair is held on the second Sunday of June each year attracting thousands of people, during which Haight Street is closed between Stanyan and Masonic to vehicular traffic, with one sound stage at each end.[38]

See also

  • Chinese Immersion School at De Avila
  • Counterculture of the 1960s
  • Haight Ashbury Free Clinics
  • Haight-Ashbury Switchboard
  • Huckleberry House
  • Haight Street Grounds
  • I-Beam (nightclub)
  • Kerista Commune
  • Magnolia Thunderpussy
  • The Process Church of The Final Judgment (religious movement formerly based in Haight-Ashbury)
  • The Red Victorian
  • {{Portal-inline|San Francisco Bay Area}}

References

1. ^{{cite book |title=Democracy's Children: The Young Rebels of the 1960s and the Power of Ideals |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ixE9n65NNVMC&pg=PA111 |first1=Edward K. |last1=Spann |year=2003 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |page=111|isbn=9780842051415 }}
2. ^{{Cite web |url=http://statewidedatabase.org/gis/gis2011/index_2011.html |title=Statewide Database |publisher=UC Regents |accessdate=November 4, 2014}}
3. ^{{Cite GovTrack|CA|12}}
4. ^{{Cite web | url = http://www.city-data.com/neighborhood/Haight-Ashbury-San-Francisco-CA.html | title = Haigh-Ashbury neighborhood in San Francisco, California (CA), 94117 subdivision profile | publisher = City-Data.com | accessdate = January 5, 2015}}
5. ^
6. ^SFStation.com
7. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.sftravel.com/explore/neighborhoods/haight-ashbury|title=Haight-Ashbury|work=San Francisco Travel|access-date=2017-08-17}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sfmuseum.org/street/stnames4.html|title=San Francisco Streets Named for Pioneers|publisher=Museum of the City of San Francisco|accessdate=2007-06-01}}
9. ^{{Cite book|title=Streets of San Francisco: The Origins of Street & Place Names|last=Loewenstein|first=Louis|year=1984|publisher=Lexikos|location=San Francisco|isbn=978-0-938530-27-5|page=5}}
10. ^{{Gilliland |url=https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc19801/m1/ |title=Show 42 - The Acid Test: Defining 'hippy' |show=42 |track=1}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://foundsf.org/index.php?title=The_Chutes|title=The Chutes - FoundSF |date=March 1998| accessdate=March 31, 2013}}
12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sfmuseum.org/firestation/hoodchutes.html|title=Old 21 - Neighborhood - The Chutes| accessdate=March 30, 2013}}
13. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sfmuseum.org/firestation/hoodha.html|title=Old 21 - Neighborhood - Haight Ashbury|accessdate=March 30, 2013}}
14. ^{{Cite journal|last=Godfrey|first=Brian J.|date=1984|title=Inner-City Revitalization and Cultural Succession: The Evolution of San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury District|journal=Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers|volume=46|issue=1|pages=79–91|doi=10.1353/pcg.1984.0004|issn=1551-3211}}
15. ^{{Cite news | last = Adams | first = Gerald | title = Farewell to freeway: Decades of revolt force Fell Street off-ramp to fall | newspaper = San Francisco Chronicle | date = 2003-03-28 | url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/2003/03/28/MN257078.DTL}}
16. ^{{Cite book | last = Starr | first = Jerold | title = Cultural Politics: Radical Movements in Modern History | publisher = Praeger | year = 1985 | isbn = 978-0-03-062522-0}}
17. ^{{Cite book | last = Rodriguez | first = Joseph | title = City Against Suburb: The Culture Wars in an American Metropolis | page = 40 | url = https://books.google.com/?id=1ym7AAAAIAAJ&dq=san+francisco+panhandle+freeway&q=116 | publisher = Praeger | year = 1999 | isbn = 978-0-275-96406-1}}
18. ^San Francisco Landmark Number 253
19. ^{{Cite journal |last = Ashbolt |first = Anthony |title = 'Go Ask Alice': Remembering the Summer of Love Forty Years On |journal = Australasian Journal of American Studies |volume = 26 |issue = 2 |pages = 35 |date = December 2007 |url = http://www.anzasa.arts.usyd.edu.au/a.j.a.s/Articles/2_07/Ashbolt.pdf |deadurl = yes |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20090913113150/http://www.anzasa.arts.usyd.edu.au/a.j.a.s/Articles/2_07/Ashbolt.pdf |archivedate = 2009-09-13 |df =}}
20. ^{{Cite news | last = White | first = Dan | title = In San Francisco, Where Flower Power Still Blooms | newspaper = The New York Times | date = 2009-01-09 | url = http://travel.nytimes.com/2009/01/09/travel/escapes/09american.html}}
21. ^T. Anderson, The Movement and the Sixties: Protest in America from Greensboro to Wounded Knee, (Oxford University Press, 1995), p.174
22. ^Ashbolt, Anthony. "'Go Ask Alice': Remembering the Summer of Love Forty Years On". JSTOR. JSTOR, n.d. Web. 2 Mar. 2014.
23. ^Tamony, Peter. "Tripping out in San Francisco". American Speech. 2nd ed. Vol. 56. N.p.: Duke UP, n.d. 98-103. JSTOR. Web. 13 Mar. 2014.
24. ^{{Cite journal | doi=10.1080/17541328.2015.1058480|title = The business of getting high: Head shops, countercultural capitalism, and the marijuana legalization movement| journal=The Sixties| volume=8| pages=27–49|year = 2015|last1 = Davis|first1 = Joshua Clark}}
25. ^Ashbolt, Anthony. "From Haight-Ashbury to Soulful Socialism: Culture and Politics in the Movement". Australasian Journal of American Studies. 3rd ed. Vol. 1. N.p.: Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association, n.d. 28-38. JSTOR. Web. 13 Mar. 2014.
26. ^{{cite book |last1= Miles | first1= Barry | title= Hippie |date= 2004 | publisher= Sterling | location= New York| pages=106–112 }}
27. ^{{cite AV Media | people =Gail Dolgin; Vicente Franco | date =2007 | title =American Experience: The Summer of Love | url =https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/love/index.html | publisher =PBS | accessdate =2007-04-23}}
28. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.sfsu.edu/~avitv/avcatalog/88444.htm |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2006-11-22 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060319070344/http://www.sfsu.edu/~avitv/avcatalog/88444.htm |archivedate=2006-03-19 |df= }}
29. ^{{Cite news|url=http://content.time.com/time/travel/cityguide/article/0,31489,1845230_1845056_1845029,00.html|title=San Francisco: 10 Things to Do — 5. Haight-Ashbury - TIME|work=Time|access-date=2017-08-17|language=en-US|issn=0040-781X}}
30. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/love/sfeature/timeline.html |title=The Year of the Hippie: Timeline |accessdate=2007-04-24 |work=PBS.org }}.
31. ^{{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/love/filmmore/pt.html|title=Transcript (for American Experience documentary on the Summer of Love)|publisher=PBS and WGBH|date=2007-03-14}}
32. ^{{cite book |title=San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury |author=Katherine Powell Cohen |page=77 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M1KgnlNPMHMC |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |year=2008 |isbn=9780738559940}}
33. ^{{cite news |title=Calm has descended on Haight-Ashbury |agency=UPI |newspaper=The Milwaukee Journal |date=17 December 1979 |page=4 |quote=But by winter, with drug pushers moving into the neighborhood in force, the Haight abruptly turned into a teenage slum of robbers, rapists, and speed freaks.|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=OCEqAAAAIBAJ&sjid=4SoEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3120,4973443&dq=san+francisco+diggers&hl=en}}
34. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/724540/Haight-Ashbury |title=Haight-Ashbury (district, San Francisco, California, United States)|publisher=Britannica Online Encyclopedia |accessdate=30 October 2012}}
35. ^The Other Cafe
36. ^{{cite web | url=http://theothercafe.com/the-official-other-cafe-story/ | title=The Other Cafe Story | year=2011 | accessdate=Mar 30, 2013 }}
37. ^{{cite news |title= Red Vic Movie House in San Francisco to Close|author=Johnson, G. Allen |url=http://articles.sfgate.com/2011-07-07/news/29746004_1_theater-seats-netflix-poster |newspaper=San Francisco Chronicle |date=July 7, 2011 |accessdate=August 14, 2011}}
38. ^Street Fair website

Further reading

  • {{citation |last=Davis |first=Joshua Clark |title=The Business of Getting High: Head Shops, Countercultural Capitalism, and the Marijuana Legalization Movement |journal=The Sixties: A Journal of Politics, Culture and Society |volume=8 |pages=27–49 |date=Summer 2015|doi=10.1080/17541328.2015.1058480 }}
  • {{citation |first=Joan |last=Didion |url=http://www.saturdayeveningpost.com/2017/06/14/in-the-magazine/didion.html |title=Slouching Towards Bethlehem |date=July–August 2017 |journal=Saturday Evening Post |orig-year=September 23, 1967}}
  • {{citation |last=Perry |first=Charles |title=The Haight-Ashbury: A History |publisher=Wenner Books |date=2005 |orig-year=1984}}
  • {{citation |url=http://www.arcadiapublishing.com/9780738559940/San-Franciscos-Haight-Ashbury |first=Katherine |last=Powell Cohen |title=San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury |publisher=Arcadia Publishers |date=2008}}

External links

{{wikivoyage|San Francisco/Haight}}{{Commons category|Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco}}
  • The Haight-Ashbury 30 Years Ago: A Timeline
  • [https://diva.sfsu.edu/bundles/189371 The Maze: Haight/Ashbury] – 1967 KPIX-TV documentary about the Haight-Ashbury district presented by writer Michael McClure, from the Digital Information Virtual Archive at San Francisco State University
  • Who's Who of the Haight-Ashbury Era
  • [https://www.slideshare.net/DoctorSequoia/the-haightashbury-era-of-the-1960s The Haight Ashbury Era] -- a visual essay on the culture of the Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s

Geographic situation within San Francisco

{{Geographic Location 2
| Center = Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco
| North = North Panhandle
| Northeast = Alamo Square
| East = Lower Haight
| ESE = Duboce Triangle
| Southeast = Castro
| Southwest = Sunset District
| South = Cole Valley
| WSW =
| West = Golden Gate Park
| WNW =
| Northwest = Richmond District
}}{{Neighborhoods of San Francisco}}{{Hippies}}{{SFBayshopping}}{{Authority control}}

6 : Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco|Neighborhoods in San Francisco|Hippie movement|History of San Francisco|Shopping districts and streets in the San Francisco Bay Area|Western Addition, San Francisco

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