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(New page: The '''Angry Revolt''' was a chain of early 1970s head shops owned by Ken Forbes, Jr, son of organ dealer E. E. Forbes. Forbes planned a coffee shop and hippie hangout which would...)
 
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The '''Angry Revolt''' was a chain of early 1970s head shops owned by [[Ken Forbes, Jr]], son of organ dealer [[E. E. Forbes]].
[[Image:Angry Revolt.jpg|right|thumb|375px|The Angry Revolt in Homewood]]
The '''Angry Revolt''' was a chain of early 1970s head shops owned by [[Ken Forbes Jr]], grandson of organ dealer [[E. E. Forbes Sr]].


Forbes planned a coffee shop and hippie hangout which would help cultivate a generation of liberal leaders in [[Birmingham]]. He opened the first store on [[The Curve]] in [[Homewood]] in [[1972]]. His intention was to  Homewood officials declined to approve a business license for a coffee shop, so he stocked record albums, guitars and alternative newspapers and operated as a retail store.
Forbes planned a coffee shop and hippie hangout which would help cultivate a generation of liberal leaders in [[Birmingham]]. He opened the first store on [[The Curve]] in [[Homewood]] in [[1972]]. His intention was thwarted when Homewood officials declined to approve a business license for a coffee shop, so he stocked record albums, guitars and alternative newspapers and operated as a retail store.


He expanded retail offerings with waterbeds, clothing and smoking paraphernalia, and encouraged people to hang out by installing foosball tables. By [[1973]] two other locations had opened on [[1st Avenue North]] in [[Woodlawn]] and on the [[Bessemer Super Highway]] in [[Midfield]].
He expanded retail offerings with waterbeds, clothing and smoking paraphernalia, and encouraged people to hang out by installing foosball tables. By [[1973]] two other locations had opened on [[1st Avenue North]] in [[Woodlawn]] and on the [[Bessemer Super Highway]] in [[Midfield]].
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* Forbes, Ken Jr (April 3, 2010) "[http://www.kensreligiousleft.com/2010/04/kens-biography-celebrating-kens-79th.html Ken's Biography]". ''Ken's Religious Left''
* Forbes, Ken Jr (April 3, 2010) "[http://www.kensreligiousleft.com/2010/04/kens-biography-celebrating-kens-79th.html Ken's Biography]". ''Ken's Religious Left''


[[Category:Record stores]]
[[Category:1972 establishments]]
[[Category:1974 disestablishments]]
[[Category:Former record stores]]
[[Category:Counterculture]]
[[Category:Counterculture]]
[[Category:18th Street South Homewood]]
[[Category:18th Street South Homewood]]
[[Category:29th Avenue South Homewood]]
[[Category:29th Avenue South]]
[[Category:1st Avenue North]]
[[Category:1st Avenue North]]
[[Category:Bessemer Super Highway]]
[[Category:Bessemer Super Highway]]
[[Category:1972 establishments]]
[[Category:1974 disestablishments]]

Latest revision as of 14:33, 5 December 2017

The Angry Revolt in Homewood

The Angry Revolt was a chain of early 1970s head shops owned by Ken Forbes Jr, grandson of organ dealer E. E. Forbes Sr.

Forbes planned a coffee shop and hippie hangout which would help cultivate a generation of liberal leaders in Birmingham. He opened the first store on The Curve in Homewood in 1972. His intention was thwarted when Homewood officials declined to approve a business license for a coffee shop, so he stocked record albums, guitars and alternative newspapers and operated as a retail store.

He expanded retail offerings with waterbeds, clothing and smoking paraphernalia, and encouraged people to hang out by installing foosball tables. By 1973 two other locations had opened on 1st Avenue North in Woodlawn and on the Bessemer Super Highway in Midfield.

Forbes was arrested seven times on various minor charges, all dismissed. The gas crisis of the mid-1970s doomed the business as his most profitable item, water beds, became prohibitively expensive and his core clientele, young people, had less disposable income. All locations were closed by 1974 and Forbes moved to California.

References