They did a lot of crazy stuff in the Sixties, man. Especially at universities like Berkeley, a hotbed of political radicalism, of experiments with free love and cheap drugs (or was that cheap love and free drugs?) and of… map reviews. This is the verbatim text of such a review from the Berkely BARB de dato March 1-7, 1968 and written by E.D. Denson.
“Certainly the most astonishing document to come from the underground presses is Humbead’s Revised Map of the World With List of Population. It provides the independent verification of the fallacy of space, and that pernicious reasoning that makes New York and Berkeley seem far apart on normal maps. Everyone knows that what’s important is people, not distances, and now for the first time we have a map recognizing this.”
“It also provides the first real attempt to link together what Lonnie Feiner calls the tinker-toy of life. Perhaps you’ve noticed, if you are a traveller, that you continue to run into the same people over and over again as the years move on in different guises.”
“Today they are guitar makers, tomorrow gardeners, next year they’ll be selling insurance or founding religions, but you can be certain that in any new scene half of the population will be people you already know.”
“The reason for this is the relatively small population of the world, we’ve always suspected. Now here for the first time is a list of the population of the inhabited world (Berkeley, SF, LA, NYC, Boston & Cambridge) drawn by one of the most encyclopedic of our generation. A sample of the perhaps 1000 names: Big John Campbell, Stan Lee, Little Junior Parker, Ken Spiker, Danny Kalb, Lawrence Ferlinghetti.”
“Tom and I had, as we are wont, a long discussion of how this list was drawn up. It seemed unlikely that one person knew all of these names: I don’t and I’ve been in the same scenes that the compiler has, I believe. But it also seems unlikely that a committee drew up lists either, because there is some indefinable consistency in the names, some internal logic which links them together.”
“Perhaps they were taken from the Berkeley BARB 1966-67? But no, because the Berkeley BARB doesn’t know of many of these people because they have been living in other portions of the world. I fall back on my original thesis: one man knew all of these names.”
“You can too. As a public service several of us have agreed to pool our knowledge and publish the Charchild-Denson Identifier of Humbead’s List of the world’s Population. There are some gaps in our collective knowledge, which we invite the public to fill. So go to the Print Mint, get the map, turn on your decoder ring, and off we go.”
“NW QUADRANT: Campbell Coe–Photographer and owner of Campus Music. Brian Rohan–SF atty & recently dance promoter with the Grateful Dead. Ravi Shankar–Indian musician associated with the sitar, Billboard artist of the Year.”
“Lyndon Johnson–the latest, and perhaps last, president. Don Reno-hillbilly musician, flourished late 1940’s with Red Smiley? Eugene Pugatch–doctor of great renown. Timothy Leary–public figure, martyr, priest. Jesse Fuller–one man band from Georgia now resident in Oakland, records for various companies.”
“Peter Siegel–recorder and producer of Pat Kilroy’s record on Elektra. Paul Smith, Bill Stein (assistance please). Gypsy Boots–inventor of the Gypsy Boots energy bar. Rolf Cahn–neo-folk guitarist, founder of the Caballe, flourished Berkeley 1950’s. That’s all for today’s broadcast gang, tune in again sometime.”
Lyndon Johnson, perhaps the last president? That must have been some good acid. Or some deep shit.This map was sent in by John Ross, and can be found here on humbead.com.
Unfortunately, the names are illegible and I couldn’t google a larger image. Anyone? Man?
Update on the list of names: they can be found here on the aforementioned site. Thanks to ubermensch for pointing that out.



The name list is http://www.humbead.com/hmbpop.html You can also order copies of the original printed map, doubt if it’s electronically available besides this one.
Comment by ubermensch — December 3, 2007 @ 1:19 am
Some interesting details in the map:
Look for SE Asia, Africa (can’t miss it…), a Tennessee-shaped island, and what looks like a warped version of Antarctica for the rest of the world. There’s also a miniature Cape Cod Penninsula/Boston area towards the southeast, as an extension of Cambridge.
Comment by Don Hargraves — December 3, 2007 @ 2:33 am
[...] 211 – Humbead’s Revised Map of the World (With List of Population) « strange maps Strange Map design that generates borders by the names of the area’s residents. Also, there’s some rather trippy mapping technique which I can’t figure out yet. (tags: nyc map hippies design cartography) [...]
Pingback by The Voice of A » links for 2007-12-03 — December 3, 2007 @ 6:30 am
[...] a great counterculture map of the world on Strange Maps. The map is good but even better is a quote from a review of it in a 60s Berkeley [...]
Pingback by Peter’s Blog » Blog Archive » “Everyone knows that what’s important is people, not distances” — December 3, 2007 @ 11:01 am
It’s an interesting (if horribly self-centered) map. The hippie Neptune in the lower right corner, though, reminds me of everything that was unsavory about the culture that sprung out of Haight Ashbury.
Comment by El Santo — December 3, 2007 @ 5:34 pm
[...] Humbead’s Revised Map of the World (With List of Population) [...]
Pingback by Good to Go Pile . . . « Trading for the Masses — December 3, 2007 @ 5:50 pm
Snobbery!
Comment by lordhutton — December 3, 2007 @ 8:11 pm
Dear god, what a generation. In order to “open their minds” they were really closing them to anything that wasn’t their “scene”. In feeling they didn’t belong, or were being excluded, by the “squares” of the world, they in turn excluded everyone that wasn’t cool.
Comment by Wampus — December 4, 2007 @ 1:35 am
Its not snobbery, its too much acid.
Comment by cyclepromo — December 4, 2007 @ 2:24 am
[...] of my favorite blogs, Strange Maps, surprises me with a map in which my own home, Berkeley, is the clear center of the universe, as it should be. Great [...]
Pingback by Davos Newbies » Blog Archive » The Berkeley view of the world — December 4, 2007 @ 10:16 pm
Just to clarify some points. Note that there is room to add any names you think we may have omitted. Use a 00 Rapidograph pen with India Ink. That was the plan all along. Second, the “hippie” Neptune is an image of Pigpen, who played in a band called The Greatful Dead. The projection is not mercator, or one of the regular projections, it is a metaphysical projection. Finally, to badly paraphrase the great Scoop Nisker, “if you don’t like this map, go out and make one of your own!”. That’s what we did.
Comment by The Great Humbead — December 7, 2007 @ 6:34 am
Grateful Dead, that should have read. sorry for the typo
Comment by The Great Humbead — December 7, 2007 @ 6:35 am
[...] Humbead’s Revised Map of the World [...]
Pingback by the new shelton wet/dry — December 7, 2007 @ 11:31 am
I’ve been playing with the Population lists, adding context where I could find relevant information. See http://oook.info/humbeadMs4.html for the current state.
Comment by Hugh Blackmer — December 8, 2007 @ 3:21 pm
2Hugh pretty
Comment by Bloom — December 25, 2007 @ 7:01 am
Absolutely brilliant!
Comment by Newcastle on Tyne — February 8, 2008 @ 12:23 am
[...] alias … I’m on to you, Ed.) It resembles post-Woodstock art, the type you would find in counter-culture dailies or underground comix printed under publishers with names like “Rip Off” and [...]
Pingback by Crabcake Confidential: A Fine Example « The Webcomic Overlook — February 29, 2008 @ 4:53 am
The map was originally published in early 1968, before Woodstock. Another edition was issued in late 1969, with the addition of a number of names of people previously omitted, including a number that John Sebastian, who had just returned from Woodstock, suggested. A third edition was published in 1970, with a slightly different set of names, and a different design.
Comment by The Great Humbead — August 26, 2008 @ 8:09 pm
thank you
Comment by Tony — May 4, 2009 @ 3:18 am
thanks for this map
good
luck
..
Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 8:44 am
merci
Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 6:26 am
Vielen Dank
Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 4:58 am
Muchas gracias
Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:23 am