Owsley-Stanley-Obituary

Owsley Stanley

Obituary

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Owsley "Bear" Stanley, a 1960s counterculture icon who worked with The Grateful Dead and was a prolific LSD producer, died in a car crash in Australia, his family said Monday. He was 76.

Lyrics sung by The Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix and Frank Zappa reference Stanley and his brushes with the law, underlining his influence.

Stanley produced an estimated pound (half a kilogram) of pure LSD, or roughly 5 million "trips" of normal potency of the hallucinogenic drug, after enrolling in 1963 at the University of California at Berkeley and becoming involved in the drug scene that underpinned the hippie movement, according to the BookRags.com website.

He was an accomplished sound engineer who worked for the psychedelic rock band The Grateful Dead and inspired the band's dancing bear logo.

Sam Cutler, a firm friend of Stanley since 1970 when Cutler became the band's tour manager, described him as was "a wonderful man and a great teacher."

"His death is a grievous loss to his family and the tens of thousands of people from the '60s on who were influenced by his work with The Grateful Dead," Cutler said.

Stanley, who adopted Australia as his home country in the early 1980s when he became convinced that the Northern Hemisphere was destined for a new ice age, was the son of a U.S. government attorney and his namesake grandfather, Augustus Owsley Stanley, was a Kentucky governor and U.S. senator.

Stanley was driving a car that swerved off a highway and down an embankment before hitting trees near the town of Mareeba in Queensland state Saturday. His wife was treated for minor injuries from the crash.

Stanley remained unrepentant about his pioneering role in Californian drug culture that made the name "Owsley" a slang term for quality LSD and landed him in prison for two years in the early 1970s.

"I wound up doing time for something I should have been rewarded for," he told the San Francisco Chronicle in a rare media interview in 2007.

"What I did was a community service, the way I look at it," he added.

A family statement Monday described Stanley as "our beloved patriarch."

He is survived by his wife, Sheila, four children, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, the statement said.




Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press

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Not sure what to say?

thanks for all the trips that my people and I took in the good ole days on sterling farms golf course during the summer nights. It was always an honor to check out your product during some of the dead shows we attended out on the west coast. Getting to meet you at the Haight Ashbury medical tent at the greek in 1983 was a trip as well.

Peace to you forever my buddy.

Let the light in.

THANKS FOR OPENING MY MIND TO THE TRUE HORIZON

built by Doug Irwin and Larry Robinson -Robinson custom Inlays

You were an great person Owsley.
You made the horizon wider.
Trip on'

" Wake up to find out that you are the eyes of the world..."

Our correspondances are over...but the memories remain

I've spent many many hours reading about bear and about his life........what an interesting and intelligent man....the world has become darker since he left. Bear may the light inside you guide you home. You will be missed!

I wrote him once just to have some communication with someoone who changed the paths of so many lives including my own. My closing line was, "I see that you are 71; I'm glad that the world has had so many good years." The world is certainly poorer for the loss of him.