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Chapter 4 - y

The Bohemian Grove

and Other Retreats

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THE.

BOHEMIAN

GROVE

Books by G. William Domhoff

Fat Cats and Democrats (1972)

The Higher Circles (1970)

Who Ruks America? (1967)

C. Wright Mills and The Power Elite

(coeditor with Hoyt B. Ballard, 1968)

The Bohemian Grove

and Other Retreats

A Study in Ruling-Class Cohesiveness

by G. William Domhof f

HARPER TORCHBOOKS

Harper & Row, Publishers

New York, Hagerstown, San Francisco, London

To Lynne, Lori, Bill, and Joel

STANDAHD BOOK NUMBEH: 06-090395-3

THE BOHEMIAN GROVE AND OTHER RETREATS: A STUDY IN RULING-CLASS COHE-

srvENESS. Copyright © 1974 by G. William Domhoff. All rights reserved.

Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or

reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in

the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For

information address Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., 10 East 53rd Street, New

York, N.Y. 10022. Published simultaneously in Canada by Fitzhenry & Whiteside

Limited, Toronto.

Designed by Janice Stem

First HARPER COLOPHON edition 1975.

1 31 6 1

77 78 10 9 8 7 6 5 4

Contents

Prefac

e

1

IX

The Bohemian Grove

1

3

2

Other Watering Holes

60

Do Bohemians, Rancheros, and Roundup

Riders Rule America?

82

Index

vii

Preface

In America, retreats are held by just about every group you

can think of—scouts, ministers, students, athletes, musicians,

and even cheerleaders. So it is not surprising that members of

the social upper class would also have clubs that sponsor such

occasions. Three of these retreats for the wealthy few are the

subject of this book.

Retreats are interesting in and of themselves. They are especially interesting when—like the bacchanalian rites discussed

in this book—they involve elaborate rituals, first-class entertainment, a little illicit sex, and some of the richest and most powerful men in the country.

However, this book has a purpose beyond presenting a

relatively detailed description of three upper-class watering

holes that are of intrinsic interest. Upper-class retreats are also

of sociological relevance, for they increase the social cohesiveness of America's rulers and provide private settings in which

business and political problems can be discussed informally

and off the record. Moreover, their existence is evidence for a

theory heatedly disputed by most social scientists and political

commentators: that a cohesive ruling group persists in the

IX

United States despite the country's size and the diversity of

interests within it.

The material for this book was gathered from club members,

present and former employees of the clubs, historical archives,

and newspapers. Almost all the information presented can be

found in scattered public sources, but interviews were essential

in making sense out of it. Repeated discussions with two interviewees also enriched the account with colorful details and

with a feel for the ethos of the encampments and rides. I am

deeply indebted to these people for their help.

The biographical information, which is the systematic core

of the book, comes primarily from the years 1965 to 1970.

Although post-1970 occupations and appointments are noted

for some of the people discussed, I have not tried to take account of deaths, retirements, and changes in occupational status

after 1970. For this reason, the account is already history in

some sense of the word. However, this presents no problem

from my perspective, for the people mentioned are merely

exemplars of an ongoing social process. I hope readers will

keep this caution in mind when they come across the name of

a deceased or retired person who is spoken of as if he were still

alive or active in his business or profession.

My primary research assistants for this project were Joel

Schaffer, Michael Spiro, and Lisa Young, who carried out the

studies of the social, economic, and political connections of

members and guests. They also combed newspaper and magazine sources for relevant information. Their detailed labors are

gratefully acknowledged, and a special thanks is added to Lisa

Young for her fine drawings, which enhance this book.

I also want to express my thanks for the helpful hints of

writer John Van der Zee, whose research efforts on the first

retreat I discuss—the Bohemian Grove—came to my attention

as I was finishing my research and beginning to write. Although

we have not compared notes, he was helpful to me in several

ways, as I hope I was to him in certain small details. His book

on the Bohemian Grove is entitled Power at Ease: Inside the

Greatest Men's Party on Earth (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,

1974).

My research on the second retreat discussed, the Rancheros

Visitadores, was aided in its initial stages by the work of

Michael Williams, "Los Rancheros Visitadores," a paper for

my graduate sociology seminar on the American upper class

at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in the fall of

1970. After the chapter was written, I learned further useful

details from the undergraduate research work conducted by

Peggy Rodgers and Donna Beck of the University of California,

Santa Barbara, and I am grateful to them for sharing their

findings with me.

As in the past, friends and colleagues have saved me from

a multitude of sins, both substantive and stylistic. In this instance, my most helpful reader was my major informant, who

unfortunately must remain nameless. Other readers with helpful suggestions were Richie Zweigenhaft, a social psychologist

at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Cynthia Merman, my editor at Harper & Row.

My thanks, finally, to the Torchbook Department of Harper

& Row, and to the Research Committee of the Academic Senate, University of California, Santa Cruz, for the financial support that made this project possible, and to Mrs. Charlotte

Cassidy, Cowell College, University of California, Santa Cruz,

XI

for typing the final manuscript with her usual careful correction

of grammatical and spelling errors.

G.W.D.

University of California

Santa Cruz, California

June 29,1973

Xll

The Bohemian Grove

The Cremation of Care

Picture yourself comfortably seated in a beautiful open-air

dining hall in the midst of twenty-seven hundred acres of giant

California redwoods. It is early evening and the clear July air

is still pleasantly warm. Dusk has descended, you have finished

a sumptuous dinner, and you are sitting quietly with your

drink and your cigar, listening to nostalgic welcoming speeches

and enjoying the gentle light and the eerie shadows that are

cast by the two-stemmed gaslights flickering softly at each of

the several hundred outdoor banquet tables.

You are part of an assemblage that has been meeting in this

redwood grove sixty-five miles north of San Francisco for nearly

a hundred years. It is not just any assemblage, for you are a

captain of industry, a well-known television star, a banker, a

famous artist, or maybe a member of the President's Cabinet.

You are one of fifteen hundred men gathered together from all

over the country for the annual encampment of the rich and

the famous at the Bohemian Grove. And you are about to take

part in a strange ceremony that has marked every Bohemian

Grove gathering since 1880. You are about to be initiated into

the encampment by the Cremation of Care.

Out of the shadows on one of the hillsides near the dining

circle there come the low, sad sounds of a funeral dirge. As

you turn your head in its direction you faintly see the outlines

of men dressed in pointed red hoods and red flowing robes.

Some of the men are playing the funereal music; others are

carrying long torches whose flames are a spectacular sight

against the darkened forest.

As the procession approaches the dining circle, the dim

figures become more distinct, and attention fixes on several

men not previously noticed who are carrying a large wooden

box. Upon closer inspection the box turns out to be an open

coffin, and in that coffin is a body, a human body—real enough

to be lifelike at a glance, but only an imitation, made of black

muslin wrapped around a wooden skeleton. This is the body of

Care, symbolizing the concerns and woes that important men

supposedly must bear in their daily lives. It is Dull Care that is

to be cremated this first Saturday night of the two-week

encampment of the Bohemian Grove.

The cortege now trails slowly past the dining area, and the

men in the dining circle fall into line behind the hooded priests

and pallbearers, following the body of Care toward its ultimate

destination. The entire parade (all white, mostly elderly)

makes its way along a road leading to a picturesque little lake

that is yet another of the sylvan sights the Bohemian Grove

has to offer.

It takes the communicants about five minutes to make their

march to this new setting. Once at the lake the priests and the

body of Care go off to the right, in the direction of a very large

altar which faces the lake. The followers, talking quietly and

remarking on the once-again-perfect Grove weather, move to

the left so they can observe the ceremony from a green meadow

on the other side of the lake. They will be about fifty to a hundred yards from the altar, which looms skyward thirty to forty

feet and reveals itself to be in the form of a huge Owl, whose

cement shell is mottled with primeval green mosses.

While the spectators seat themselves across the lake, the

priests and their entourage continue for another two or three

hundred yards beyond the altar to a boat landing. There the

bier is carefully transferred onto the Ferry of Care, which will

carry the body to the altar later in the ceremony. The ferry

loaded, the torches are extinguished and the music ends. The

attention of the spectators on the other side of the lake slowly

drifts back to the Owl shrine; it is illuminated by a gentle flame

from the Lamp of Fellowship which sits at its base.

People who have seen the ceremony before nudge you to

keep your eye on the large redwood next to the Owl. Moments

later an offstage chorus of "woodland voices" begins to sing.

Then a spotlight illuminates the tree you've been watching,

and there emerges from it a hamadryad, a "tree spirit," whose

life, according to Greek mythology, is intimately bound up

with the tree in which it lives. The hamadryad begins to sing,

telling the supplicants that beauty and strength and peace are

theirs as long as the trees of the Grove are there. It sings of

the "temple-aisles of the wood" that are made for "your delight," and implores the Bohemians to "burn away the sorrows

of yesterday" and to "cast your grief to the fires and be strong

with the holy trees and the spirit of the Grove." 1

With the end of this uplifting song, the hamadryad returns

to its tree, the chorus silences, and the light on the tree fades

1. Charles K. Field, The Cremation of Care (1946, 1953), for these

and following quotes. A copy of this small pamphlet can be found in

the Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.

out. Only natural illumination from the moon and stars remains, and it is time for the high priest and his many assistants

to enter the large area in front of the Owl. "The Owl is in his

leafy temple," intones the high priest. "Let all within the Grove

be reverent before him." He beseeches the spectators to be

inspired and awed by their surroundings, noting that this is

Bohemia's shrine. Then he invokes the motto of the club,

"Weaving spiders, come not here!"—which is a line from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. It is supposed to warn

members not to discuss business and worldly concerns, but only

the arts, literature, and other pleasures, within the portals of

Bohemia.

The priest next walks down three large steps to the edge of

the lake. There he makes a flowery speech about the ripple of

waters, the song of birds, the forest floor, and evening's cool

kiss. Again he calls on the members to forsake their usual concerns : "Shake off your sorrows with the City's dust and scatter

to the winds the cares of life." A second and third priest then

recall to memory deceased friends who loved the Bohemian

Grove, and the high priest makes yet another effusive speech,

the gist of it being that "Great Nature" is a "refuge for the

weary heart" and a "balm for breasts that have been bruised."

A brief song is sung by the chorus and suddenly the high

priest proclaims: "Our funeral pyre awaits the corpse of Care!"

A horn is sounded at the boat landing. Anon, the Ferry of

Care, with its beautifully ornamented frontispiece, begins its

brief passage to the foot of the shrine. Its trip is accompanied

by the music of a barcarole—a barcarole being the song of

Venetian gondoliers as they pole you through the canals of

Venice. As one listens to the barcarole, it becomes even clearer

that many little extra touches have been added by the Bohe-

mians who have lovingly developed this ritual over its ninetyfour-year history.

The bier arrives at the steps of the altar. The high priest

inveighs against Dull Care, the archenemy of Beauty. He

shouts, "Bring fire," and the torchbearers (eighteen strong)

enter. Then the acolytes quickly seize the coffin, lift it high

above their heads, and carry it triumphantly to the pyre in

front of the mighty Owl. It seems that Care is about to be

consumed by flames.

But not yet. Suddenly there is a great clap of thunder and a

rush of wind. Peals of loud, ugly laughter come ringing down

from a hill above the lake. A dead tree is illuminated in the

middle of the hillside, and Care himself bellows forth with a

thundering blast:

"Fools! Fools! Fools! When will ye learn that me ye cannot

slay? Year after year ye burn me in this Grove, lifting your

puny shouts of triumph to the stars. But when again ye turn

your feet toward the marketplace, am I not waiting for you,

as of old? Fools! Fools! To dream ye conquer Care!"

The high priest is taken aback by this impressive outburst,

but not completely humbled. He replies that it is not all a

dream, that he and his friends know they will have to face

Care when their holiday is over. They are happy that the good

fellowship created by the Bohemian Grove is able to banish

Care even for a short time. So the high priest tells Care, "We

shall burn thee once again this night and in the flames that eat

thine effigy we'll read the sign: Midsummer sets us free."

Dull Care, however, is having none of this. He tells the high

priest in no uncertain terms that priestly fires are not going to

do him in. "I spit upon your fire," he roars, and with that there

is a great explosion and all the torches are immediately extin-

guished. The only light remaining comes from the small flame

in the Lamp of Fellowship.

Things are clearly at an impasse. Care may win out after

all. There is only one thing to do: turn to the great Owl, the

totem animal of Bohemia, chosen as the group's symbol primarily for its mortal wisdom—and only secondarily for its

discreet silence and its nightly prowling. The high priest falls

to his knees and lifts his arms toward the shrine. "O thou, great

symbol of all mortal wisdom," he cries. "Owl of Bohemia, we do

beseech thee, grant us thy counsel!"

The inspirational music of the "Fire Finale" now begins, and

an aura of light glows about the Owl's head. The Owl is going

to rise to the occasion! After a pause, the sagacious bird finally

speaks. No fire, he tells the assembled faithful, can drive out

Care if that fire comes from the mundane world, where it is

fed by the hates of men. There is only one fire that can overcome the great enemy Care, and that, of course, is the flame

which burns in the Lamp of Fellowship on the Altar of

Bohemia. "Hail, Fellowship," he concludes, "and thou, Dull

Care, begone!"

With that, Care is on his way out. The light dies from the

dead tree. The high priest leaps to his feet and bounds up the

steps, snatches a burned-out torch from one of the bearers, and

relights it from the flame of the Lamp of Fellowship. Just as

quickly he ignites the funeral pyre and triumphantly hurls the

torch into the blaze.

The orchestral music in the background intensifies as the

flames leap higher and higher. The chorus sings loudly about

Dull Care, archenemy of Beauty, calling on the winds to make

merry with his dust. "Hail, Fellowship," they sing, echoing the

Owl. "Begone, Dull Care! Midsummer sets us free!" The wail-

ing voice of Care gives its last gasps, the music gets even

louder, and fireworks light the sky and fill the Grove with the

reverberations of great explosions. The band, appropriately

enough, strikes up "There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town

Tonight." Care has been banished, but only with a cast of 250

elders, priests, torchbearers, shore patrols, fire tenders, production managers, and woodland voices.

As this climax approaches, some fifty minutes after the march

began, the quiet onlookers on the other side of the lake begin to

come alive. After all, it is a night for rejoicing. The men begin

to shout, to sing, to hug each other, and dance around. They

have been freed by their priests and their Owl for some good

old-fashioned hell raising. They couldn't be happier if they were

hack in college and their fraternity had won an intramural

football championship.

Now the ceremony is over. The revelers, initiated into the

carefree attitude of the Bohemian Grove, break up into small

groups as they return to the camps that crowd next to each

other in the central area of the Grove. It will be a night of storytelling and drinking for the men of Bohemia as they sit about

their campfires or wander from camp to camp, renewing old

friendships and making new ones. They will be far away from

their responsibilities as the decision makers and opinion molders of corporate America.

Jinks High and Jinks Low

The Cremation of Care is the most spectacular event of the

midsummer retreat that members and guests of San Francisco's

Bohemian Club have taken every year since 1878. However,

there are several other entertainments in store. Before the

Bohemians return to the everyday world, they will be treated to

plays, variety shows, song fests, shooting contests, art exhibits,

swimming, boating, and nature rides. Of all these delights, the

most elaborate are the two Jinks: High Jinks and Low Jinks.

Among Bohemians, planned entertainment of any real magnitude is called a Jinks. This nomenclature extends from the

earliest days of the club, when its members were searching for

precedents and traditions to adopt from the literature and entertainment of other times and other places. In the case of

Jinks, they had found a Scottish word which denotes, generally

speaking, a frolic, although it also was used in the past to refer

to a drinking bout which involved a matching of wits to see

who paid for the drinks. Bohemian Club historiographers, however, claim the word was gleaned from a more respectable

source, Guy Mannering, a novel by Sir Walter Scott; there the

High Jinks are a more elevated occasion, with drinking only a

subsidiary indulgence.2

In any event, the early Jinks at the Grove slowly developed

into more and more elaborate entertainments. By 1902 the High

Jinks had become what it is today, a grandiose, operetta-like

extravaganza that is written and produced by club members

for its one-time-only presentation in the Grove. The High Jinks,

presented on the Friday night of the last weekend, is considered the most important formal event of the encampment.

Most of the plays written for the High Jinks have a mythical

or fantasy theme, although a significant minority have a historical setting. Any moral messages center on inevitable human

frailty, not social injustice. There is no spoofing of the powersthat-be at a High Jinks; it is strictly a highbrow occasion. A

2. Robert H. Fletcher, The Annals of the Bohemian Club (San Francisco: Hicks-Judd Company, 1900), Vol. I, 1872-80, p. 34.

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