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Welcome to A Trip Thru the '60s!
This section is part of the The Hippie Archives. These pages are here for students and researchers to study this fascinating period in history.
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A Trip Through the Sixties - How It All Began
Category: A Trip Thru the '60s | Topic: The Sixties | Books about The Sixties | Print this page Print  Send this story to a friend E-Mail
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How It All Began

January, 1961 saw the inauguaration of a new president, John F. Kennedy.  The youngest president ever, he brought a vibrant energy into the White House, and claimed to represent a "new generation of Americans". His enthusiasm was contagious and his famous inaugural speech ended with "ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country." It was a rallying cry for young people to participate in the world's greatest democracy and together create a new vision of our future.

Kennedy spoke of a New Frontier.  By March 1st Kennedy brought into being the Peace Corps, an organization where young people could help other less fortunate countries realize their dreams.  Despite problems getting his domestic programs through Congress, Kennedy was immensely popular in the U.S. and abroad. It was a time of great ambition and optimism in America.  He even promised us the moon!


Jackie Kennedy stands with son John Jr. and Robert Kennedy at JFK's funeral

But before JFK could lead us to a world of peace and prosperity for all, he was assassinated in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963. The bullets that ripped through JFK that day in Dallas, also struck each of us.  They pierced our illusions allowing the dirty reality of life in America to invade our consciousness.  Whether you were a child sent home from school that day, or a middle aged mourner, the assassination undermined our faith in the elusive American Dream.

But for many Americans, life has always been a series of broken promises and shattered dreams....

Kennedy Inauguration Speech (Real Audio)


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Suggested Reading

Memoirs of an Ex-Hippie: Seven Years in the Counterculture
By Robert Roskind

Just as the Beats immortalized their lives and times in such books as On The Road, Robert Roskind likewise commemorates the liberated lifestyle of the hippie era. This look back, while very personal, is also the archetype for a whole generation whose quest for freedom and the meaning of life led to some mind-blowing experiences.
Read Skip's Review!


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Related Links
 · Flashbacks Forum
 · Sixties Timeline
 · Hippies From A to Z
 · Hippie Forum
 · A Trip Thru the '60s
 · Links to the '60s
 · Sixties Gallery
More about The Sixties
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Anti-War Movement
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Black Power Movement
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Civil Rights Movement
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Sexual Revolution
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Student Rights Movement
· A Trip Through the Sixties - The Vietnam War
· About The Hippie Archives
· Black Panthers Video (1968)
· Casual Sex in the 60s
· Do we Love the Vietnamese More than our Black Brothers? (1967)
· Gathering of the Tribes - Human Be-In
· hello summer
· Huey P. Newton - Picture A Revolutionary Video
· Landmark Hippy Events
· Native American Speaks Out About Poverty (1965)
· Negro 'Paranoia' (1968)
· North Beach: The Beat Goes On!!
· Rediscovering the Past
· Rules of the Black Panther Party
· Technology for Life by Lewis Herber (1969)
· The 1960s
· The African American Past and the American Present (1968)
· The System Does Not Work by Marvin Garson (1969)
· The Underground Press
· The Woodstock Experience (1969)
· Who Owns People's Park? (1969)
· Why Women Aren't Liberated Yet (1969)
· Youth As A Class (1968)
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