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Medicine Woods

CIRCA 1975
Owners/Occupants:
Roger Jahnke 1974-1996
Address:
10334 Red Bud Lane
Stewart, Ohio, Ohio

Brief History

From the mid-1960s to mid-1970s a “Back to the Earth” movement flourished driven by a desire for freedom, self-sufficiency, and sustainable rural living.  Communes and co-ops often symbolized the living organization, and geodesic domes were a popular structure, but many were counter-culture individuals that built their own homes by hand and worked the land to create an eden of sustainable simplicity – Medicine Woods in Stewart is a quintessential architectural representation of the period.   Roger Jahnke, then a university student, lived in a small 150 sf cabin while he constructed his Medicine Woods home.  He developed a spring for water needs, heated the home with wood exclusively, dug and installed an outhouse, and planted a wide variety of medicinal herbs based on his interest in alternative Chinese medicine and healing. 

Home to
Location
1965

The Haight-Ashbury neighbor in San Francisco become identified as the birthplace of the counter-culture movement. Home to the Grateful Dead, the Diggers community anarchist street theater group, and the first-ever head shop, the “Haight” became a magnate for youth looking to flee suburdia to tune in, turn on, and drop out.

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1969

“Hippie” communes become an increasing popular lifestyle choice as people reject urban, materialistic routines for more simple, agrarian collective living. A popular movie in 1969, “Easy Rider,” included a scene from a commune.

Location
1970

Following the Kent State massacre on May 4th, 1970s, student protests erupted in Athens with firebombing and the eventual closing of the University on May 15th.

Location
1971

Art Park, the effort by famed Athens Sculptor and Ohio University professor David Hostedler, closed. Hostetler had purchased 40 acres off Terrel Road to create an “earth workshop” where artists and students would convene to create and display their work. It was invsioned as a place where “Man’s imagination can work in harmony with – not against – his environment.” A four-day festival in May 1970 was expected to attract 10,000 artists and visitors, but was canceled in the wake of student riots. But the Grateful Dead did play a free concert at Art Park.

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1974

Roger Jahnke builds his temporary cabin for shelter while he builds Medicine Woods.

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1975

Medicine Woods is completed

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1982

Swanky’s, a legendary Athens Bar home to hipsters, hippies, and counter-culturalists, closes and with it the 60s and 70s. Back to the Earthers head back to the burbs.

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A KALEIDOSCOPE OF HISTORIC COMMUNITIES WITH DISTINCTIVE PERSONALITIES