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Haight Ashbury Switchboard

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Haight-Ashbury Switchboard

During the "hippie" period 1967–1968 in San Francisco, an individual named Al Rinker started an organization located at 1830 Fell St in the city's Haight Ashbury district called the Switchboard. Its purpose was to act as a social switchboard for people living there.

Contents

History

In early 1967 the Diggers (not the 1649 English group but the new USA Diggers who named themselves after the original group) were promoting a new type of philosophy and life concept in the Haight Ashbury. With media coverage of the district increasing, a local resident Al Rinker visualized the need for a service providing news and information about the Hippie movement. He rented an apartment at 1830 Fell Street in early 1967, adjacent to the Panhandle of Golden Gate Park, to act as both his home and headquarters of his conceptual "Switchboard". Al found willing assistants in George Darling and Danny to assist with his concept of a human switchboard.

While he and the volunteers were doing this, the "Human Be In" took place and the Fillmore Auditorium was gaining national prominence. News coverage of the Haight Ashbury skyrocketed bringing in more people with more work required to keep the Switchboard going.

The rapid influx of people flooding the area created an immediate need for some services that Al had not originally considered. One of these was in finding safe lodging (Crash Pads) for the wandering jobless hippies that arrived without any means of support. This program proved so popular that Al's office (living room) was changed to the "We will help you find a place to stay" room. Al moved his office to a tiny room next to the kitchen. The Switchboard attracted additional volunteers Ron Small and Ken Englander to assist with the many tasks the Switchboard wanted to accomplish.

Social networking took a back seat to the more critical services required by the population explosion. In summary, the Switchboard was created, then made useful by events not originally considered and grew to fill those needs as well as those in its original plan.

Description of Services

Al Rinker had this mission statement for the Switchboard "The Switchboard is a volunteer service designed to facilitate communication among people throughout San Francisco, and specifically to serve as an informational and referral source for the Haight-Ashbury community." As mentioned above, this mission quickly became secondary to services required in a community flooded with runaways and youthful hippies with no means of support. From June 1967 through September 1967, the Switchboard spent a great deal of its time resource in the following areas:

  • Runaway Assistance - Children will always run away from home for one reason or another. Many times there are very valid reasons. Other times they are childish reasons. Who can judge one from the other and how? The runaway assistance program attempted to mediate between the runaway child and their parent(s).
  • If requested, the Switchboard would contact the parents and pass on a message or tell them that their child wished to communicate with them or simply tell them the child was OK.
  • It worked the other way also, a parent thinking their runaway child might have headed for the glitz of the Haight could call and leave a message that they wished to communicate with their child.
  • Al had the rule that no parent would be told the location of their child without approval from the child. Legally this was dangerous but Al insisted that without strict adherence to it, none of the runaways that wished to remain runaways would have ever left a message to be delivered to their parents.
  • At least eleven children were reunited with their families.
  • A very successful program for assisting runaways in San Francisco is The Huckleberry House. Still in its infancy in 1967, it took many referrals from the Switchboard to provide Counseling Services. Later Huckleberry House services were expanded to include 24-hour crisis services and emergency shelter.
  • Crash Pad referral - or the free bed for the night program. It wasn't difficult to get press coverage. Newspapers and News stations were eager for any stories about the Haight. Al got enough coverage that he was able to fill a large index box of organizations and private individuals willing to provide a bed to a needy person. People called every day either offering or needing assistance. After 4PM every day, the front room was filled with young people seeking a bed for the night. During the Summer of Love this was the busiest service performed by the Switchboard.
  • In the fall of '68, Hippie had long been declared dead and as the cold fog wisped into the Panhandle every afternoon, the number of visitors to the Haight had dropped in equal proportion to the temperature. By October 1968 the front room was restored to its original function as Al's office.
  • After October 1968, no one was asking for a crash pad anymore, so Al Rinker began publishing and was the Editor of the "It's Happening NOW!Magazine". It was published monthly by Switchboard at 1830 Fell St., S.F., CA 94117. Volume 1, Number 1, was published in October of 1968 and cost 25 cents. Subscription rates were $3 per year. News reports were welcome, but not poems or short stories. It was printed by Associated Students of San Francisco State College. Quoting from Rinker's first editorial, "This magazine is a dream about dreams. The most precious resources of mankind is a man working for something he believes in. Without room for this energy the human spirit bends, twists, explodes to make room--or dies." Page 2. Assistant Editors were Jo Ann Silverstein and Leonard Frank. "Got A Welfare Problem? Call Switchboard!" by Al Rinker, Page 3, opens with a statement of the purpose of Switchboard: "If you're confused about Welfare, the legal ins and outs, what's due you--and what isn't--and you're shy about asking the case worker, there's an easy way out. Call Switchboard! The new service is available through the San Francisco Switchboard each evening between 7 and 10 P.M. Monday through Thursday. Volunteer social workers will be on hand to take calls concerning any problems or questions you have in regards to Welfare. This service is anonymous and is intended to aid a person in knowing what he is entitled to, so that he, or she, is not completely at the mercy of an impersonal system..."
  • Social Events 1967–1968

  • Music concert – On August 15, 1967, Happening House planned an arts and crafts fair followed by a free live concert in the Panhandle. About 15 bands were to perform however the police would not issue a permit for the live music portion of the fair. The Switchboard and Happening House then jointly sponsored a live music concert at Sokel Hall on Page Street as a follow up to the fair.
  • Softball Games - As a fund raising activity, the Switchboard formed a softball team
  • In July 1967 there was a radio broadcast game between the Switchboard and the KNEW radio staff. A bevy of Playboy playmates were scheduled to participate and play an inning or two. While enough players from the Switchboard and KNEW showed up to play, no Playmates ever arrived at the game.
  • In August '67, the Switchboard played its second and last game against Happening House. This received TV news coverage but notes from the game do not mention on which TV station(s). They do mention the game was won by the Switchboard by a score of 28-16.
  • The infamous cocktail party - In the heyday of the '67 summer, Al and Ron Small were invited to speak on a local radio talk show. From ideas sown during that broadcast, it was decided to have a cocktail party that would be attended by both the "straights" (translate that to political figures, newspaper figures, authoritarian figures like the police) and the "Hips"(translate that to the founders and invited staff of (1) the Psychedelic Shop (Ron Thelin and his brother Jay Thelin), (2) the Switchboard (Al Rinker, George Darling, and many others), (3)The Diggers, (4)The Free Clinic (Dr.David E. Smith) and other organizations active in the "Hip scene"). Al was contacted by someone calling himself Herb who professed to be a journalist. Herb wanted to provide monetary support for the party in exchange for interviews with Al and others at the Switchboard. He wrote Al a check for $1500.00 not an insignificant sum at that time. The money went toward loads of booze and some party food (no drugs). John Shelley the Mayor of San Francisco and Herb Caen a popular journalist at the San Francisco Chronicle (not the Herb above) both made appearances and the free flowing alcohol made for a lot of camaraderie. But not much came of the event except that the check Al had been given bounced and Herb disappeared after the party. While this was not the only reason, the Switchboard began to change. Al had financial problems and the mood of the Haight itself had changed.
  • In late September 1967, many of the shops in the district began to display a stack of 4x5 cards on their counters proclaiming "Funeral Notice for Hippie". "Friends are invited to attend services beginning at sunrise, October 6, 1967 at Buena Vista Park". Al actively supported the funeral concept. Al and many of the original Digger group had realized that the media had exploited the word "Hippie" to have a or be a negative concept and decided to have a funeral to end the negative connotation that had become attached to the word. The media once again twisted the purpose of the event and broadcast the story nationwide calling it "The Death of the Hippie" without explaining the true purpose of the procession. During the days preceding the event, Al Rinker described the event as the beginning of the end. Ron Thelin gave away everything in the Psychedelic Shop to the customers who came in. The funeral procession went from the park down Haight St and ended in the Panhandle. Ron (of the Switchboard) was one of the pallbearers carrying a trinket filled casket. It was emblematic of the fate of the hippie movement and of the Switchboard. The Psychedelic Shop closed for good right after the funeral. The Switchboard lingered on but withered. Al left for more remote northern territories in 1970.
  • Later period

    After the departure of Al Rinker, Ken Englander and others took up the Switchboard concept. They moved to a storefront office at 1797 Haight St. It went through a number of moves and forum changes through the 1990s.

    Before he left, Al Rinker transferred the Haight Ashbury Switchboard's 501 (c)(3) (non profit tax status) to Pam Hardt and Jed Riffe. They changed the name to Resource One and moved it into Project One.

    Where are they now

  • Al Rinker died in May 2003. He wrote a book about the entire Haight Ashbury experience called "Beyond Haight" which was never published.
  • Ron continues to be involved with his charitable projects for runaways and other youth programs.
  • Ken Englander(A Vietnam Veteran),George, Danny, and all the other noble volunteers from that brief period have vanished more successfully than Hippie.
  • JoAnn Silverstein is a professor of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering in the Environmental Engineering Dept of the University Of Colorado, Boulder.
  • Ron Thelin moved to the San Geronimo Valley in Marin County, CA. He died in 1996.
  • Jay Thelin became president of the Thelin Company, which makes wood pellet-burning heaters. He sold the company in 2009 and retired.
  • References

    Haight-Ashbury Switchboard Wikipedia