Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bohemian Grove is a restricted 2,700-acre (1,100-hectare) campground in Monte Rio, California. Founded in 1878, it belongs to a private gentlemen's club known as the Bohemian Club . In mid-July each year, the Bohemian Grove hosts a more than two-week encampment of some of the most prominent men in the world.
The following list of Bohemian Club members includes both past and current members of note. Membership in the male-only, private Bohemian Club takes a variety of forms, with membership regularly offered to new university presidents and to military commanders stationed in the San Francisco Bay Area .
The Cremation of Care is an annual ritual production written, produced, and performed by and for members of the Bohemian Club. It is staged at the Bohemian Grove near Monte Rio, California, in front of a 40-foot tall image of an owl, at a small artificial lake amid a private old-growth grove of Redwood trees.
The Bohemian Club's City Clubhouse, from the corner of Taylor Street and Post Street. The City Club is located in a six-story masonry building at the corner of Post Street and Taylor Street, two blocks west of Union Square, and on the same block as both the Olympic Club and the Marines Memorial Club.
Bohemian Grove is located in Monte Rio. History. Beach on Russian River at Monte Rio, 1909. ... which was sold to San Francisco's Bohemian Club in 1899. The club ...
The Bohemian Club (1872), which hosts the Bohemian Grove retreat; The Cercle de l'Union ("the French Club") (1905) [48] [49] The City Club of San Francisco (1930), until 1987 called the Pacific Stock Exchange Lunch Club [50] [51] The Concordia-Argonaut Club (1864) [52] [53] The Family (1901), founded by members of the Bohemian Club who left in ...
The camp, which sits atop the late 19th century location of the then-infamous Bohemian Grove, maintains a signature suspension bridge over which more than 100,000 young musicians have crossed. [ 9 ] References
A portion of this tract, located on the Russian River, was sold to the Bohemian Club of San Francisco and is now the Bohemian Grove. In 1906, Robert bought a Victorian style home in San Rafael and named it "Falkirk," after his birthplace in Scotland. He lived there until his death.