Although the hippie movement's effects were obvious all over the country, the 'headquarters' I guess you could say, was San Francisco, California. One of the more specific areas where hippies often gathered is the Haight-Asbury district in San Francisco. It's sort of the Mecca of the hippie movement. San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair) by Scott McKenzie is, in my opinion, the anthem of the movement's gravitation to the area during the 1960's.
San Francisco, California, was considered the capital of the hippie movement in the 1960s. The Haight-Ashbury district in San Francisco became a focal point for counterculture, peace, and love during this time.
San Francisco, California.
San Francisco- lots of movement
The hippie monument erected in 1990 by Bob "Boo" Maw is located in San Francisco, California at the corner of Haight and Shrader Streets. It serves as a symbol of the counterculture movement that thrived in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in the 1960s.
The Giants' first season in San Francisco was in 1958.
San Francisco
The Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, California is considered to be one of the primary centers of the hippie subculture.
Some cities that begin with the prefix "San" include San Francisco, San Diego, San Antonio, and San Jose.
Both of these earthquakes occurred due to movement on a transform fault. In the San Francisco earthquakes, this movement occurred on the San Andereas fault and in Haiti this was caused by movement on the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault.
san francisco
· Alcatraz (San Francisco Bay, California)