Attraction 31 / 33
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Location
Area around Haight and Ashbury Streets
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Haight-Ashbury

Commonly known as “The Haight”, San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury neighborhood is most closely associated with the Hippie subculture of the 1960s, some of which is still evident today.
History of The Haight
When San Francisco was just a young city,
Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco
the area known as Haight-Ashbury was full of farms and open space. But when the Haight Street cable car line was built, the neighborhood experienced a boom, eventually becoming a desirable upper-middle-class neighborhood with many lovely homes. It was also one of the only parts of the city that was spared after the fires that followed the famous 1906 San Francisco Earthquake.

During and after the Great Depression, Haight-Ashbury suffered a serious decline and after a slight rise post-World War II, by the 1950s it was a less than desirable neighborhood with plenty of vacant houses.

Soon, the presence of empty houses for sale at
Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco
low prices and plenty of cheap rooms to rent attracted a group of young people (many of them beatniks) that eventually became known as Hippies. By the mid-60s, Haight-Ashbury became the home base of the Hippie subculture. It was also known as a center for illegal drug use and became home to many of the decades' psychedelic rock groups, like Jefferson Airplane and The Grateful Dead.

By the time the 1967 “Summer of Love” happened, Haight-Ashbury was “the” place to be if you were a Hippie. Thousands of young people had, by this time, migrated to the area from all around the country. Haight-Ashbury received lots of negative publicity from conservative groups who disapproved of the Hippie lifestyle and many looked down at San Francisco as a place that proliferated this bohemian way of life.

Since that time, the neighborhood has never been the same and some members of the
Red Victorian, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco
Flower Power generation still make their home in The Haight forty years later.

Haight-Ashbury Today
Haight-Ashbury is no longer a haven for Hippies but some of that culture is still evident in the many vintage clothing shops, second-hand stores, and cafes scattered around the neighborhood.

Today, locals break The Haight into two sections: Upper and Lower. The Upper Haight extends from Stanyan to Masonic and tends to be an upscale shopping area that attracts both tourists and affluent residents. The Lower Haight, in contrast, is home to a number of music clubs and is a popular nightlife destination.

At the famous corner of Haight and Ashbury, you’ll now find a quintessential sign that the twenty-first century has come to the old Hippie neighborhood – a Ben and Jerry’s Ice Cream shop.

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