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Andy Roberts - Divine Rascal: On the Trail of LSDs Cosmic Courier, Michael Hollingshead

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Andy Roberts Divine Rascal: On the Trail of LSDs Cosmic Courier, Michael Hollingshead
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Divine Rascal: On the Trail of LSDs Cosmic Courier, Michael Hollingshead: summary, description and annotation

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Of all the figures associated with the history of LSD there is none more enigmatic than Michael Hollingshead. Appearing as if from nowhere, he turned Timothy Leary on to LSD in 1962, and was influential in Learys years at Harvard, Millbrook, and beyond. A Zelig-like character, Hollingshead was a key player in Londons early LSD scene. In 1965 he went to London to establish a cultural beachhead for Learys LSD philosophy at the World Psychedelic Centre in Chelsea. Following a spell in prison, where he dosed KGB spy George Blake, he continued to pursue adventures with the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, established a psychedelic commune, created the first electronic I Ching installation, published an underground magazine, and spent time in Nepal, before dying a mysterious death in Bolivia in the 1980s.Psychedelic trickster guru, or conman and charlatan? Exactly who Hollingshead was and what his motives were remain unclear. Some believed he was working for the secret services, others that he was just a Leary wannabe, his aspirations destroyed by his deviant personality and addiction to alcohol and opiates. Divine Rascal is the first reliable biography of one of psychedelias key figures, without whom the trajectory of LSD in the world would have been radically different.

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DIVINE RASCAL
Divine Rascal On the Trail of LSDs Cosmic Courier Michael Hollingshead Andy - photo 1
Divine Rascal
On the Trail of LSD's Cosmic Courier, Michael Hollingshead
Andy Roberts
Divine Rascal by Andy Roberts
First published by Strange Attractor Press 2019
ISBN: 9781907222788
Andy Roberts has asserted his moral right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the written permission of the publishers. A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Divine Rascal On the Trail of LSDs Cosmic Courier Michael Hollingshead - image 2
Strange Attractor Press
BM SAP, London,
WC1N 3XX, UK
www.strangeattractor.co.uk
Distributed by The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
And London, England
Printed and bound in the UK by TJ International
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Michael Shinkfield doing his National Service. RAF West Kirby, 1950.
Michael (16), sister Janette (11) and brother David (13) outside their parents home.
Michael Shinkfield (top row second left) Red Hill School, November 1946.
Michael Shinkfield and bride to be Sophie Naimon, NYC, 1959.
Sophie Hollingshead and Vanessa Hollingshead, Maryland, early 1960s.
Michael and Sophie Shinkfield. The cracks are showing! NYC early 1960s.
Sophie Naimon (later Shinkfield/Hollingshead) late 1950s.
Pages from Dr. John Beresford's 1963 Sandoz desk diary indicating he still had some of the original Magic Gram, H-00047.
Michael Shinkfield, pre-LSD, early 1960s.
Michael Hollingshead in his NYC apartment, early 1960s.
The issue of London Life magazine which exposed and destroyed the World Psychedelic Centre.
Hollingshead's drawing, in a letter to Leary, wryly depicting how the prison officers at HMP Leyhill viewed him, 28 December, 1967.
Hollingshead playing an imaginary cello on a plinth outside the Royal Albert Hall, early 1970s.
Michael Hollingshead (bottom left), working for George Litwin's company. 1974 (credit: Auriol Roberts).
Cover of Vol 3 of Flow magazine, London, early 1972.
Michael Hollingshead at his Cambridge, Mass. Apartment, Christmas 1974. Don't look into his eyes!
A psychedelic doodle Hollingshead left with Bodil Birke in Copenhagen, Winter 1967.
Michael Hollingshead with his third child, Esther, 1980.
Cover of the European release of Hollingshead's theme song, The Man Who Turned On The World.
One of the last photographs of Michael Hollingshead prior to his death. Bolivia, 1984.
Michael Hollingshead's original grave in the German cemetery, Cochabamba, Bolivia.
Artist Feliks Topolski's sketch of Hollingshead and some of the Pure Land Ashram communards, London 1971/2.
Two pages from Flow.
Acknowledgements
Many people have been of assistance with my research into the mystery that is Michael Hollingshead. They are listed below and my apologies if I have missed anyone. My greatest thanks are to Michael's eldest daughter, Vanessa Hollingshead. Despite being only too aware of her father's foibles Vanessa has been unstinting in her support for Divine Rascal and an invaluable source of information, documents and photographs and this book could not have been written without her encouragement and assistance.
Steve Abrams, Brian Barritt, Bear, Peter Beren, John Barth Beresford, Rosemary Beresford, Jo Berke, Steve Bissette, Anthony Blond, Bodil Birke, Virginia Blyth, Janette Boggon, Tim Booth, Bob Campbell, Chris Case, Tony Cook, Mike Crowley, Age Delbanco, Paul Devereux, Jeff Dexter, Liz Elliot, Jenny Fabian, William Patrick Forbes, Robert Forte, Michael Froehlich, Caroline Frusciante, Oli Genn-Bash, Christopher Gibbs, Kristof Glinka, Nigel Gordon, Judy Hargreaves, Tim Hargreaves, Lee Harris, Graeme & Nicky Hartley-Martin, Kevin Hebrides, Gregg Hermetech, Roger Hermiston, Ev Hesketh, Philip Hesleton, Albert Hofmann, Hoppy, Jean Houston, Martin Izat, Kami Kanetsuka, Paul Krassner, Susan Kruglinski, Martin Lee, Joe Mellen, Ralph Metzner, Patricia McCann, Joe Mellen, Modafanil, Karen OBrien, Mark Pilkington, Auriol Roberts, Ciaran Shaman, Paul Sieveking, Alan Shinkfield, Timothy Shinkfield, Pat Smith, Jamie Sutcliffe, Mandy Roberts, Ben Sessa, Gunther Weil, Timothy Wylie
Introduction
This they tell, and whether it happened so or not I do not know; but if you think about it, you can see that it's true.
Ive always known who Michael Hollingshead was Or I thought I did He was the - photo 3
I've always known who Michael Hollingshead was. Or I thought I did. He was the guy with the mayonnaise jar full of LSD-infused sugar paste who acted as midwife to Timothy Leary's first LSD trip in 1961 and helped give birth to the psychedelic revolution of the 1960s. He was famous, wasn't he? Yet when I was carrying out research for Albion Dreaming , my social history of LSD in Britain, other than a few references in Leary's books and histories of psychedelic culture I found hardly any information about this enigmatic character. For someone who played such a crucial role in the early days of LSD culture, Hollingshead's role was minimised, even written out of popular histories and memoirs of the era. Even his appearance was mysterious. The handful of poor-quality photographs available on the internet showing a stern, conservatively-dressed man of indeterminate age were at odds with the joyful, colourful culture he was central to. The circumstances of his arrival on the psychedelic scene in 1961 and his role within it exuded an air of mystery, amplified by the fact that Michael Hollingshead wasn't even his real name. So, who was Michael Hollingshead?
This lack of information, and the mystery which accompanied it, piqued my curiosity about his life before and after his fateful meeting with Tim Leary. As I dug deeper into the arcane reaches of psychedelic history, I found references to Hollingshead everywhere, Zelig-like, stalking the landscapes of western psychedelic culture's most iconic events. Look back to 1961 and there he is in Boston, Massachusetts, an enthusiastic catalyst for Leary's lysergic initiation and ascension to fame and guru-status. In 1962 you'll find him assisting with the legendary Harvard-Concord prison and Marsh Chapel psilocybin experiments, and in 1963 heavily involved with the little known but highly influential Agora Scientific Trust. In 1964, Hollingshead is trying to stage an LSD exhibition at the World's Fair in New York while simultaneously debating the founding of Sigma with beat poet and author Alex Trocchi, before collaborating with Leary again in LSD fuelled mischief at the infamous Millbrook mansion.
In 1965 Hollingshead returned to Britain, roaming swinging London like a sinister Austin Powers; making everything psychedelic baby by turning on the hip, the rich and the famous, whether they wanted it or not. If you were in prison during the 1966 and 67 Summers of Love, you might have heard Hollingshead tell how he gave LSD to a Russian spy or how trepanation was the new method of consciousness change. In 1968 you'd find Hollingshead hanging out with the fabled Brotherhood of Eternal Love in the mountains and beaches of California, before flying to Kathmandu in 1969 to cause ripples on the hippie trail and start a psychedelic poetry magazine. Fast forward eighteen months and he's back in Britain, founding a hippie commune on a Scottish island with the aid of Franciscan monks before in 1972 creating the world's first multi-media predictive art installation in Edinburgh. Hollingshead later enjoyed daring psychedelic escapades in Tonga, Scandinavia and Europe before dying in mysterious circumstances in Bolivia.
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