Saturday, July 20, 2019
Hippy Movement :: essays research papers
   Hippy Movement    Through out history the world has seen some generations that have made an impact more than all of its predecessors. The decade from1960     to 1970 was definitely one of those eras. The people didn't follow the     teachings of its elders, but rejected them for an alternative culture     which was their very own(Harris 14). Made up of the younger population     of the time this new culture was such a radical society that they were     given their own name which is still used today. They came to be called     the Hippies. The Hippie movement started in San Francisco, California     and spread across the United States, through Canada, and into parts of     Europe (World Book). But it had its greatest influence in America.     During the 1960's a radical group called the Hippies shocked America     with their alternative lifestyle and radical beliefs. Hippies came from many different places and had many different     backgrounds. All Hippies were young, from the ages of 15 to 25    (Worldbook). They left their families and did it for many different     reasons. Some rejected their parents' ideas, some just wanted to get     away, and others simply were outcasts, who could only fit in with the     Hippie population. "Under 25 became a magical age, and young people all     over the world were united by this bond" (Harris 15). This bond was of     Non-conformity and it was the "Creed of the Young" (Harris 15). Most     Hippies came from wealthy middle class families. Some people said that     they were spoiled and wasting their lives away. But to Hippies     themselves this was a way of life and no one was going to get in the     way of their dreams and ambitions.     Hippies flocked to a certain area of San Francisco on the corner     of Haight Street and Ashbury Street, where the world got their first     view of this unique group. This place came to be known as the Haight     Ashbury District. There were tours of the district and it was said that     the tour "was the only foreign tour within the continental limits of     the United States" (Stern 147). The Hippies were so different that the     conservative middle class could not relate to them and saw them as     aliens. The Haight Ashbury district lies in the very center of San     Francisco. In the years of 1965 and 1966 the Hippies took over the     Haight Ashbury district(Cavan 49). There they lived and spread their     					    
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