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The murders perpetrated by members of Charles Manson's "Family" were inspired
in part by Manson's prediction of Helter Skelter,
an apocalyptic war he believed would arise from tension over racial
relations between blacks and whites.[1] This
"chimerical vision," as it was termed by
the court that heard Manson's appeal from his conviction for the
Tate-LaBianca killings,[2]
involved reference to music of The Beatles and to the New Testament's Book of
Revelation.[3]
Background
Manson had been predicting racial war for some time before he
used the term Helter Skelter.[4][5]
His first use of the term was at a gathering of the Family on New Year's Eve
1968. This took place at the Family's base at Myers Ranch, near
California's Death
Valley.[5][6]
In its final form, which was reached by mid-February 1969,[7]
the scenario had Manson as not only the war's ultimate beneficiary
but its musical cause. He and the Family would create an album with
songs whose messages concerning the war would be as subtle as those
he had heard in songs of The Beatles.[4][8]
More than merely foretell the conflict, this would trigger it; for,
in instructing "the young love,"[9]
America's white youth, to join the Family, it would draw the young,
white female hippies out of San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury.[7][10][11]
Black men, thus deprived of the white women whom the political
changes of the 1960s had made sexually available to them, would be
without an outlet for their frustrations and would lash out in
violent crimes against whites.[11][12
] A resultant murderous rampage against blacks by
frightened whites would then be exploited by militant blacks to
provoke an internecine war of mutual near-extermination between
racist and non-racist whites over blacks' treatment. Then the
militant blacks would arise to sneakily finish off the few whites
they would know to have survived; indeed, they would kill off all
non-blacks.[13][14][15]
In this holocaust, the members of the enlarged Family would have
little to fear; they would wait out the war in a secret city that
was underneath Death
Valley that they would reach through a hole in the ground. As
the only actual remaining whites upon the race war's true
conclusion, they would emerge from underground to rule the
now-satisfied blacks, who, as the vision went, would be incapable
of running the world; Manson "would scratch [the black man's] fuzzy
head and kick him in the butt and tell him to go pick the cotton
and go be a good nigger...."[14][16]
The term Helter Skelter was from the so-named Beatles
song, which involved apparent
reference to the British amusement-park ride of
that name and was interpreted by Manson as concerned with the
war.[4]
The song was on the so-called White Album (formal name, The
Beatles), first heard by Manson within a month or so of
its November 1968 release:[17]
- When the Beatles’ White Album came out, Charlie
listened to it over and over and over and over again. He was quite
certain that the Beatles had tapped in to his spirit, the truth —
that everything was gonna come down and the black man
was going to rise. It wasn’t that Charlie listened to the
White Album and started following what he thought the
Beatles were saying. It was the other way around. He thought that
the Beatles were talking about what he had been expounding for
years. Every single song on the White Album, he felt that
they were singing about us. The song "Helter Skelter" — he was
interpreting that to mean the blacks were gonna go up and the
whites were gonna go down.
- — Former Manson follower Catherine Share, 2009 documentary
Manson, Cineflix Productions et al.[18]
Although Manson thought almost every song on the album had a
meaning connected with the events he and, in his view, The Beatles were
foreseeing, he had to lay out the supposedly-coded meanings for his
followers.[8]
White Album songs specifically known to have been
connected with the vision are:
- I Will
- Honey Pie
- Don't
Pass Me By
- Yer Blues
- Sexy
Sadie
- Rocky
Raccoon
- Happiness Is a Warm Gun
- Blackbird
- Helter Skelter
- Piggies
- Revolution 1
- Revolution
9
- Everybody's
Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey (connected to the
prophecy by Family member Charles "Tex" Watson,
not necessarily Manson)
Beatles songs that are not on The White Album but are also
known to have a connection to Helter Skelter are "Blue Jay Way" and "Yellow Submarine." Also linked
to the Family is the song "You Never Give Me Your
Money" whose lyrics "1,2,3,4,5,6,7, all good children go to
heaven" were found written on a door at Spahn Ranch.
Fulfillment
In the months before the murders were conceived, Manson and his
followers began preparing for Helter Skelter, which they thought
inevitable. In addition to working on songs for the hoped-for
album, which would set off everything, they prepared vehicles and
other items for their escape from the Los Angeles area (their home territory) to
Death Valley when
the days of violence would arrive. They pored over maps to plot a
route that would bypass highways and get them to the desert safely.
Indeed, Manson was convinced that the song "Helter Skelter"
contained a coded statement of the route they should follow.[19][20][21]
Manson had said the war would start in the summer of 1969.[12
] In late June of that year, months after he'd
been frustrated in his efforts to get the album made,[19]
he told a male Family member that Helter Skelter was "ready to
happen."[22]
"Blackie never did anything without whitey showin’ him how," he
said. "It looks like we’re gonna have to show blackie how to do
it."[22]
On August 8, 1969, the day Manson instructed his followers to
carry out the first of two sets of notorious murders, he told the
Family, "Now is the time for Helter Skelter."[23] When
the murderers returned to Spahn Ranch, the Family's Los Angeles area
headquarters, after the crime, Manson asked Tex Watson, the sole man
among them, whether it had been Helter Skelter. "Yeah, it was sure
Helter Skelter," Watson replied.[24]
At the conclusion of the second set of murders, the following
night (August 9-10), one of the killers wrote "Healter
[sic] Skelter" on the refrigerator of the house in which
the murders took place. That, along with other references to
Beatles songs, was written in blood.[25]
References
to the Beatles and the Book of Revelation
When The Beatles
first came to the United States, in February 1964, Charles Manson
was an inmate in the United States Penitentiary at McNeil Island, in
southern Puget Sound. He was serving a sentence for attempting to
cash a forged U.S. Treasury check;[26] he
was twenty-nine years old.[27] His
fellow inmates found his interest in the British pop group "almost
an obsession." Taught by inmate Alvin Karpis to play the steel guitar, Manson
told many persons that "given the chance, he could be much bigger
than the Beatles."[28][29]
To the Family, a few years later, Manson spoke of The Beatles as "the
soul" and "part of 'the hole in the infinite.'"[7]
When he delivered the Helter Skelter prophecy around the campfire
at Myers Ranch, the Family members believed it:
- [A]t that point Charlie’s credibility seemed indisputable. For
weeks he had been talking of revolution, prophesying it. We had
listened to him rap; we were geared for it – making music to
program the young love. Then, from across the Atlantic, the hottest
music group in the world substantiates Charlie with an album which
is almost blood-curdling in its depiction of violence. It was
uncanny.[7]
In My Life with Charles Manson, Paul Watkins wrote that
Manson "spent hours quoting and interpreting Revelation to the Family,
particularly verses from chapter 9."[19]
In an autobiography written with assistance some years after the
murders, Tex Watson said that,
apart from Chapter 9 of the Book of Revelation, the Bible had "absolutely no meaning in
our life in the Family."[4]
(Even so, Watson stated that "we... knew that Charlie was Jesus
Christ.")[4]
For a period in his childhood, Manson lived with an aunt and
uncle, while his mother was in prison. He later told a counselor
that the aunt and uncle had "some marital difficulty until they
became interested in religion and became very extreme."[30]
Beatles lyrics, as
interpreted by Manson
-
- Lyric: And when at last I find you/ Your song will fill the
air/ Sing it loud so I can hear you/ Make it easy to be near you
- Meaning: The Beatles are looking for Jesus Christ, who is
Manson[31]
-
- Lyric: Oh, honey pie, my position is tragic/ Come and show me
the magic/ Of your Hollywood song
- Meaning: The Beatles know Jesus Christ has returned to Earth
and is in Los Angeles.[31]
They want Manson to create his "song," that is, his album that will
set off Helter Skelter.[4]
- Lyric: Oh, honey pie, you are driving me frantic/ Sail across
the Atlantic/ To be where you belong
- Meaning: The Beatles want Jesus Christ to come to England[31]
- Consequence: In early 1969, Manson and his female followers
attempt to contact the Beatles by letter, telegram, and telephone;
they are struggling to make clear to the Beatles that it is they,
the Beatles, who are to come across the Atlantic, to join the
family in Death
Valley.[31]
- Lyric: I'm in love, but I'm lazy
- Meaning: The Beatles love Jesus Christ but are too lazy to go
looking for him[31]
They've worn themselves out in a trip to India to visit the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, whom they
now regard as a false prophet.[4][31]
-
- Lyric: I Listen for your footsteps coming up the drive/ Listen
for your footsteps, but they don't arrive/ Waiting for your knock
dear on my old front door/ I don't hear it; does it mean you don't
love me any more?/ I Hear the clock a-ticking on the mantle shelf/
See the hands a-moving, but I'm by myself/ I wonder where you are
tonight and why I'm by myself/ I don't see you; does it mean you
don't love me any more?
- Meaning: The Beatles are calling for Jesus Christ, who is
Manson[31]
-
- Lyric: Yes, I'm lonely; wanna die/ Yes, I'm lonely; wanna die/
If I ain't dead already/ Girl, you know the reason why)[31]
- Meaning: The Beatles are calling for Jesus Christ, who is
Manson
-
- Lyric: There's a fog upon L.A./ And
my friends have lost their way/ They'll be over soon they said/ Now
they've lost themselves instead/ Please don't be long/ Please don't
you be very long/ Or I may be asleep.
- Meaning: The Beatles are calling for Jesus Christ, who is
Manson[31]
- This connects the Helter Skelter prophecy with a song from
outside The White Album. "Blue Jay
Way" appeared on Magical
Mystery Tour, the 1967 album that preceded The
White Album and that had, itself, influenced Manson. The
Family had come to call its roundabout journey from its place of
origin, San
Francisco, to its place of settlement, the Los Angeles area, the
"Magical Mystery Tour."[32]
- The primary sources of information on Helter Skelter do not
detail Manson's interpretation of the lyrics of this song. If the
"friends" are imagined to be the Beatles, looking for Manson in Los
Angeles, the lyrics retain their ordinary sense, in which someone
is trying to get to a place in L.A., not out of it. If, on the other hand,
the "friends" are the Family, who, because of the "fog upon L.A.,"
have "lost their way" to the Beatles in England, the interpretation
would seem to be consistent with Manson's view that the lyrics are
a call to him ("Please don't you be very long") and that the
Beatles want him to "sail across the Atlantic." (See Honey
Pie, above.)
- "Blue Jay Way" is the name of an actual Los Angeles street; the
primary sources of information about Helter Skelter do not indicate
whether Manson knew that. George Harrison was staying at a house
on that street when he wrote the song.[33]
-
- Significance: Manson had renamed Family member Susan Atkins "Sadie
Mae Glutz" long before the release of The White Album.
This served to reinforce the mental connection Manson felt he had
with The Beatles.[8]
- In San Francisco, where she met Manson, Atkins had been a
topless dancer.[34] Paul Watkins wrote that
Atkins "thrived on sex," and he even seemed to suggest she had the
nickname Sexy Sadie before the Family heard the song.[35]
Similarly, Tex Watson wrote that the words of "Sexy Sadie" fit
Atkins so well "that it made us all sure [the Beatles] had to be
singing directly to us." Watson specifically noted that the song's
title character "came along to turn on everyone," "broke the
rules," and "laid it down for all to see." Atkins, he said, "had
broken all the rules, sexually, and liked to talk about her
experience and lack of inhibitions."[36]
-
- Significance: Rocky Raccoon means "coon," vulgar term for a
black man[8]
- Of all the Beatles songs known to have been connected with
Helter Skelter, this is the only one that mentions the Bible. (It
is possibly the only Beatles song at all that mentions the Bible.)
A play on the Gideons International practice of
leaving Bibles in hotel rooms, the references are to a Bible left
in the room of the title character by a "Gideon":
- So one day [Rocky Raccoon] walked into town/ Booked himself a
room in the local saloon/ Rocky Raccoon/ Checked into his room/
Only to find Gideon's Bible... Now Rocky Raccoon/ He fell back in
his room/ Only to find Gideon's Bible/ Gideon checked out/ And he
left it no doubt/ To help with good Rocky's revival.
- Manson made the connection. In the period before his trial, he
was visited at the Los Angeles County Jail by David Dalton and
David Felton, who were preparing a Rolling Stone story, about him, that
appeared in the magazine in June 1970. In an article in the October
1998 issue of the periodical Gadfly, Dalton, recounting the visit
to Manson, relayed the remarks Manson made to Felton and him about
"Rocky Raccoon":
- "Coon," said Charlie. "You know that's a word they use for
black people. You know the line, 'Gideon checked out/ And left no
doubt/ To help good Rocky's revival.' Rocky's revival -- re-vival.
It means coming back to life. The black man is going to come into
power again. 'Gideon checks out' means that it's all written out
there in the New Testament, in the Book of
Revelations [sic]."[37]
-
- Significance: The Beatles are telling blacks to get guns and
fight whites
- Sample lyric: When I hold you in my arms/ And I feel my finger
on your trigger/ I know no one can do me no harm/ Because happiness
is a warm gun/ (Bang bang, shoot shoot)[8]
While in the Death
Valley area after the New Year's Eve gathering at which Manson
announced Helter Skelter, the Family played over and over The White
Album's five following songs:[7]
-
- Lyric: Blackbird singing in the dead of night/ Take these
broken wings and learn to fly/ All your life/ You were only waiting
for this moment to arise.
- Meaning: The black man is going to arise and overthrow the
white man. The Beatles are programming blacks to rise.[8]
- In detailing Helter Skelter in his autobiography, Tex Watson
invoked this lyric obliquely:
- [The white establishment] would slaughter
thousands of blacks, but actually only manage to eliminate all the
Uncle Toms, since the
"true black race" (sometimes Charlie thought they were the Black Muslims,
sometimes the Panthers) would have hidden,
waiting for their moment.[4]
(Emphasis added)
-
- Lyric: When I get to the bottom I go back to the top of the slide/ Where I stop and I turn and I go for
a ride
- Significance: A reference to the Family's emergence from "the
Bottomless Pit," the underground Death Valley hideaway where the
group will escape the violence of Helter Skelter[38]
- In British
English, helter-skelter not only has
its meanings of "confused" or "confusedly" but is the name of an
amusement park slide,[39] which
this portion of the lyrics suggests is one of the term's surface denotations in the song. There
is nothing to indicate Manson was aware of this meaning.
- Lyric: Look out... Helter Skelter... She's coming down fast...
Yes she is.
- Meaning:The upcoming explosion of race-based violence is
imminent. These are the "last few months, weeks, perhaps days, of
the old order."[4]
- Even to someone unaware that helter-skelter is the
name of a slide, the song's mention of a slide might have indicated
that the "she" in this part of the lyrics is someone who, literally
or otherwise, is riding on a slide and "coming down fast" (i.e.,
"helter-skelter", or "out of control"). In My Life with Charles
Manson, Paul Watkins makes clear
Manson construed "she" as a reference to the words "helter skelter"
themselves. It is Helter Skelter -- which, in America, at
least, can be the noun
"confusion"[40] --
that is coming down fast, i.e., is imminent.[41]
- In trial testimony, Gregg Jakobson,
who first met Manson at the home of Beach Boy Dennis Wilson in May or early summer of
1968, described a mural he had eventually seen at the Spahn Ranch, where
Manson and most of the Family were residing at the time of the
murders:
-
-
-
- Jakobson: There was a room called — it was an old saloon in one
of the [ranch’s] old [movie] sets.
-
-
-
- Prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi: Among the front
buildings at the ranch?
-
-
-
- Jakobson: Right.
-
-
-
- Bugliosi: Right off Santa Susana Road there?
-
-
-
- Jakobson: Yes. And there was a big mural in day-glo colors. It
glowed with blue light. It depicted Helter Skelter, and it was
written.
-
-
-
- Bugliosi: The words [Helter Skelter] were written?
-
-
-
- Jakobson. Yes. And there was a picture of the mountains and the
desert and Goler Wash, and so on, and Helter Skelter coming down
out of the sky.
-
-
-
- Bugliosi: Something like a map?
-
-
-
- Jakobson: It was more like a mural that covered the whole wall.
It was rather impressive.
-
- Manson also hears the Beatles whispering to him to call them in
London.[42]
(See Honey Pie, above.)
-
- Lyric: What they need's a damned good whacking
- Significance: Blacks are going to give "the piggies" -- i.e.,
the establishment -- a damned good
whacking.[38]
This phrase Manson particularly liked.[4]
- Lyric: Everywhere there's lots of piggies/ Living piggy lives/
You can see them out for dinner/ With their piggy wives/ Clutching
forks and knives/ To eat their bacon.
- In Helter Skelter -- The True Story
of the Manson Murders, which he wrote with Curt Gentry, Vincent
Bugliosi, who prosecuted Manson and the others accused of the
Tate-LaBianca murders, draws attention to this. He notes that Leno
LaBianca was left with a knife in his throat and a fork in his
stomach. (Bugliosi has to make the point somewhat indirectly in the
text because George Harrison, who wrote the song,
refused the authors permission to quote the lyrics.)[38]
-
- Lyric: You say you want a revolution/ Well you know/ We all
want to change the world.../ But when you talk about destruction/
Don't you know that you can count me out (in)
- Significance: The singing of "in" after the word "out," even
though "in" doesn't appear in the lyrics as they were presented on
the printed sheet enclosed with the album, indicates that the
Beatles had been undecided but now favor revolution.[43]
Though they are no longer on a "peace-and-love trip," they can't
admit as much to the
establishment.[4]
- Lyric: You say you got a real solution/ Well you know/ We'd all
love to see the plan
- Meaning: The Beatles want Manson to tell them how to escape the
horrors of Helter Skelter.[44]
They are ready for the violence; they want Manson to create his
album that will tell them what to do. Its songs will be "the plan"
whose subtle messages will be aimed at the various parts of society
that will be involved in Helter Skelter.[4][8]
-
- This is the White Album piece Manson spoke
about the most,[44]
the one he deemed most significant.[4]
An audio collage more than eight minutes long, it has no
lyrics.
- Significance: Manson hears machine-gun fire, the oinking of
pigs, and the word "Rise." The piece is audio representation of the
coming conflict; the repeated utterance "Number 9" is reference to
Chapter 9 of the Book of Revelation. Revolution 9 is prophecy,
paralleling Revelation 9.[44]
"Revolution 9" = Revelation 9.[14]
- "Rise" is "one of [Manson's] big words"; the black man is going
to "rise" up against the white man.[45] While
playing "Revolution 9," Manson screams "Rise! Rise! Rise!"[42]
(From 2:33 to 2:50 of the recording, a voice that could be that of
John Lennon does, in
fact, repeat what is possibly the word "Right," not "Rise."[46]
About twenty-five seconds before that word is first heard, a voice
says something that seems to include the words "lots of stab
wounds";[44]
but Bugliosi and Gentry, who mention this in Helter
Skelter, do not indicate whether Manson or any of the
Family members heard it.)
- Manson also hears the Beatles whispering: "Charlie, Charlie,
send us a telegram."[42]
(See Honey Pie, above.) At approximately 3:45 of the
recording, a voice that could be that of George Harrison does, in fact, seem to
be saying something about a telegram.[46]
In his autobiography, Tex Watson tied the
prophecy to one more White Album song, Everybody's
Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey, though he
changed monkey to monkeys, plural. While on LSD at a party in
late March 1969, Watson explained, he and two Manson girls realized
they themselves were "the monkeys,... just bright-eyed, free little
animals, totally uninhibited." As they started "bouncing around the
apartment, throwing food against the walls, and laughing
hysterically," they were, in their own view (if not that of the
others in attendance), "all love -- spontaneous, childlike love."
It would seem Watson took the song's "me and my monkey[s]" to
signify Manson and the Family, though he doesn't say it that way;
he doesn't indicate whether the interpretation was brought to
Manson's attention.[47]
Manson himself invoked, too, "Yellow Submarine," a Beatles
song that was released in 1966 and that inspired an animated movie of the same title. The movie was released in November
1968, within a week or so of The White Album. In the
first months of 1969, after he had delivered the Helter Skelter
prophecy around the New Year's Eve campfire near Death Valley, Manson
applied the name "Yellow Submarine" to a canary-yellow, Canoga
Park house to which the Family repaired at his instruction.
There, as they would prepare for Helter Skelter, they would be
"submerged beneath the awareness of the outside world."[7]
Book of
Revelation, as interpreted by Manson
CHAPTER 9:
- Verses 2-3: And he opened the bottomless pit.... And there came
out of the smoke locusts upon the earth; and unto them was given
power, as the scorpions of the earth have power.
- locusts = Beatles[48]
- as the scorpions of the earth have power = the power of
scorpion, that is, Manson, a Scorpio, will prevail[19]
- bottomless pit = as noted above, the underground city in which
the Family will ride out the ravages of Helter Skelter. The Family
would be lowered into this by means of a gold rope;[49]
accordingly, Manson bought expensive gold rope at a Santa
Monica sporting-goods store.[50]
- Verses 7-8: ... [A]nd [the locusts'] faces were as the faces of
men. And they had hair as the hair of women....
- the Beatles are men with long hair[48]
- Verse 17: And thus I saw the horses in the vision, and them
that sat on them, having breastplates of fire, and of jacinth, and brimstone: and the
heads of the horses were as the heads of lions; and out of their
mouths issued fire and smoke and brimstone.
- breastplates of fire = the Beatles' electric guitars
- fire and smoke and brimstone out of their mouths = the Beatles'
powerful lyrics,[48]
the power of their music to ignite Helter Skelter[4]
- Verse 7: And the shapes of the locusts were like unto horses
prepared unto battle
- things that are shaped like unto horses prepared unto battle =
the dune buggies the Family will be riding during Helter
Skelter[48]
- In Manson's view, dune buggies were the ideal vehicles of the
apocalypse; they would enable the Family to outrun police in the
Bottomless Pit and were light enough that a few of the girls could
carry them. During the war, the Family would be making forays from
the Bottomless Pit. Accordingly, the dune buggies the Family
acquired, licitly and otherwise, were fitted, on Manson's
inspiration, with machine gun mounts; while the men would drive,
the girls would operate the guns.[7][51]
- Fitted next to the steering wheel of Manson's personal buggy
was a metal scabbard. It held a sword with which, in July, 1969,
Manson slashed the ear of Family acquaintance Gary Hinman.[52][53] On
the buggy's front was a winch that Manson envisioned using to evade
police, apparently in Helter Skelter. He would fling the winch's
rope up into a tree and then winch himself up out of sight as
pursuing officers would drive haplessly by.[54]
- In an article published in Los Angeles magazine in
July 2009, as the fortieth anniversary of the Tate-LaBianca murders
approached, former Manson associate Catherine Share was quoted as follows:
- Charlie talked about Helter Skelter every night. … [W]e’d learn
to live off the land. We’d live in the desert and come in on dune
buggies and rescue the orphaned white babies. We’d be the
saviors.[55]
- Verse 15: And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared
for an hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the
third part of men
- the four angels = The Beatles,[48]
prophets who are preparing the way for Jesus Christ, Manson, to
lead the chosen people away to safety[4]
- slay the third part of men = destroy the white race, that is
(it would seem), one of the three races[48]
- Verse 16: And the number of the army of the horsemen were two
hundred thousand thousand: and I heard the number of them.
- two hundred thousand thousand horsemen = motorcycle
gang-members Manson is attempting to recruit into the Family, in
advance of Helter Skelter[4][48]
- The motorcyclists, whose attention Manson began cultivating
when the Family moved to the Yellow Submarine, were to be the
Family's "needed military wing."[56] They
and the Family would cruise through Helter Skelter in the manner of
a flock of birds, all turning in one direction or another without
even a sound from their leader.[19]
If the cyclists were to be worthy of surviving Helter Skelter
alongside the Family, it was, of course, necessary they attain the
Family's level of hippie
enlightenment. Toward this end, Manson unleashed his girls as
seductresses, to wean the gang members from predisposition to
marriage as well as materialism and concern with time of day (the
latter horrors jointly embodied in the wearing of wristwatches);
with a passing exception or two, the cyclists remained
bourgeois.[57][58]
- Verse 4: And it was commanded [that the locusts] should not
hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing, neither any
tree; but only those men which have not the seal of God in their
foreheads.
- not hurt the grass of the earth, neither any green thing,
neither any tree = only humans, not nature, will be destroyed in
Helter Skelter[19]
- seal of God in their foreheads = a mark that would indicate
whether someone was on Manson's side or not;[48]
in Helter Skelter, those without it would perish[4]
(Manson never described the mark, but he left no doubt he would be
able to recognize it.)[4][48]
- Verse 20: And the rest of the men which were not killed by
these plagues yet repented not of the works of their hands, that
they should not worship devils, and idols of gold, and silver, and
brass, and stone, and of wood: which neither can see, nor hear, nor
walk....
- worship of idols of gold and silver and brass = the establishment's worship of automobiles,
houses, and money[48]
- Verse 1: And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall
from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the
bottomless pit.
- the fifth angel =
- according to Gregg Jakobson, who arranged a recording
session for Manson: Stu Sutcliffe, one of the original five,
not four, Beatles
- according to Family members such as Tex Watson and Paul Watkins: Manson[4][19][48]
CHAPTER 7:
- Verse 4: And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and
there were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the
tribes of the children of Israel.
- One hundred forty-four thousand would be the membership of the
Family when, in Helter Skelter's aftermath, it would emerge from
"the bottomless pit" to rule.[59][60] "It
would be our world then. There would be no one else, except for us
and the black servants."[61]
- It is difficult to determine how the Family's number was to
grow to one hundred forty-four thousand. In his autobiography, Charles Watson seems to
think, with incredulity, that the growth was somehow simply to be a
result of procreation;[4]
the trial testimony of Paul Watkins, on the other
hand, seems to indicate the increase was to result from the release
of the Family's album, which would draw "the young love" to the
group.[14]
The Family would also acquire (rescue) babies made homeless in
Helter Skelter.[7]
Several decades were to pass before the Family would at last depart
the Bottomless Pit; the group would live there in miniaturized
form.[62]
CHAPTER 21:
- Verses 10 and 18: And [an angel] carried me away in the spirit
to a great and high mountain, and showed me that great city, the
holy Jerusalem,
descending out of heaven from
God... and the city was pure gold,
like unto clear glass.
- Verse 21: And the twelve gates were twelve pearls; every
several gate was of one pearl: and the street of the city was pure
gold, as it were transparent glass.
- Verse 23: And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the
moon, to shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten it, and the
Lamb is the light thereof.
- The Family's Helter Skelter sanctuary under Death Valley would be
a city of gold where there would be no sun and no moon.[14]
CHAPTER 22:
- Verse 2: In the midst of the street of it, and on either side
of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner
of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month....
- The city underneath Death Valley would have a tree that would
bear twelve different kinds of fruit, a different kind each
month.[14]
(The city was also expected to have chocolate fountains; but in that detail, it
seems to have departed from the Biblical scheme.)[63]
CHAPTER 16:
- Verses 14 and 16: For they are the spirits of devils, working
miracles, which go forth unto the kings of the earth and of the
whole world, to gather them to the battle of that great day of God
Almighty.... And he gathered them together into a place called in
the Hebrew tongue Armageddon.
- In his autobiography, Watson seems to indicate that Manson
spoke of Helter Skelter as Armageddon, a term
that has come to stand for apocalyptic war.[4][64] In Helter Skelter -- The True Story
of the Manson Murders, Bugliosi seems to confirm this.[44]
CHAPTER 10:
- Verses 1 and 2: And I saw another mighty angel come down from
heaven, clothed with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and
his face was as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:
And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his right
foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth....
- For about two weeks after their departure from the "Yellow
Submarine," Family members moved into -- or broke into -- an
unoccupied mansion that had recently been vacated by the rock group
Iron
Butterfly. Overlooking the sea from the Mulholland Hills, the
house met Manson's demand that "[the Family] have access to the sea
and to the desert and that the two roads be joined."[65]
- With the help of three hundred dollars' worth of topographical maps, the Family laid out a complete and
continuous Helter Skelter escape route that ran from Malibu
beach (near this Iron Butterfly mansion), past the Family's
headquarters at Spahn
Ranch, and to Golar Wash, site of the Family's desert ranches
near Death Valley.
From Spahn, Manson, peering toward the heart of Los Angeles, really
could have his right foot upon (toward) the sea and his left foot
upon the earth. It was even rumored that Manson or a Family member
stole and maybe ruined a half-track supposedly used to clear a
Spahn-area portion of the route.[19][66]
- The escape route was marked with locations for supply-caches,
command posts, campsites. The Family's topographical maps were
found buried in Death
Valley.[19][66]
Synthesis
To Manson, the synthesis of Beatles and Bible was hardly to be
questioned:
- Look at [the Beatles'] songs: songs sung all over the world by
the young love; it ain’t nothin’ new.... It’s written in...
Revelation, all about the four angels programming the holocaust…the
four angels looking for the fifth angel to lead the people into the
pit of fire…right out to Death Valley. ... It’s all in black and
white, in The White Album — white, so there ain’t no
mistakin’ the color....[19]
Abbey
Road epilogue
If Manson's interest in and references to Magical
Mystery Tour constituted a prologue to his focus on the
White Album, there was also a kind of
epilogue in the form of Family references to Abbey Road, the
Beatle album that came after the White Album.
Abbey Road was released in the United Kingdom in
late September 1969,[67][68][69] after
the murders. By that time, most of the Family was at the group's
camp in the Death
Valley area, searching for the Bottomless Pit.[70]
Around October 1 (the U.S. release date),[71] three
Family members arrived at the camp with an advance copy of the
album, which the group played on a battery-operated machine.[72]
In the second week of October, the desert redoubts were raided
by law officers who found the Family with stolen vehicles,
including dune buggies; Manson and several others were
arrested.[73] By
mid-November, when Manson had become a suspect in the Tate-LaBianca
murders, Family members who had been released from jail had made
their way back to Spahn Ranch.[74]
There, on November 25, 1969, LAPD confiscated a door
on which someone had written "Helter Skelter is coming down
fast."[75]
A photograph shows the
confiscated door was also inscribed with "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 --
ALL GOOD CHILDREN (Go to Heaven?)" [sic].[76] This
children's rhyme is heard in "You Never Give Me Your
Money," a song that appears on Abbey Road. In October
1970, the prosecution offered testimony about the door during
Manson's trial for the Tate-LaBianca
murders; but only the "Helter Skelter" inscription seems to
have been noted.[77]
In late September or early October 1969,[78]
before the arrests, Tex Watson had left the
desert camp and gone on to separate himself from the Family. Late
in the separation, he, too, bought a cassette recording of Abbey
Road. Walking for miles across the desert to rejoin the Family
in late October, he played his tape continuously to see what The Beatles might have
to tell him. When, at the last moment, he turned back, an old
prospector informed him the arrests had taken place. Watson
returned to his native Texas,
where his own arrest, for the Tate-LaBianca murders, occurred a
month later.[79]
In late July 1970, while Manson was on trial, three persons were
hacked, two fatally, on the beach near Santa Barbara, California.
One of the Manson girls spoke of this incident as "Maxwell's Silver Hammer," an
Abbey Road song that plainly is about homicidal
madness.[80]
Timeline
1967
- March 21 - Charles Manson, aged 32, is released
from Terminal
Island, San Pedro, California, after seven years' imprisonment
for attempting to cash a forged government check. He is granted
permission to move to San Francisco.[81]
- Summer - Manson and the first members of what
will come to be known as his Family leave the San Francisco area in
an old school bus they've modified in hippie style.[82] (In
an alternate account, some months of Manson travels and acquisition
of Family members precede the group's departure from San Francisco
in the school bus, around November 10.)[83]
- November 27 - The Beatles' album Magical
Mystery Tour is released in the United States.[84] The
Family will come to call its geographical and psychological
movement in the school bus "the Magical Mystery Tour."[32]
1968
- April 4 - Martin Luther King, Jr., is
assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
- Late spring - Having ended up in the Los Angeles area after
months of roaming through the West Coast and the Southwest,[85]
Manson and the Family become associated with The Beach Boys'
Dennis Wilson
after Wilson picks up two female Family members hitchhiking in Malibu.
Several Family members begin living in Wilson's Pacific Palisades home while, by
midsummer,[86]
others will be living at the Spahn Ranch in (or near) Chatsworth.[87]
- August 9 - Gregg Jakobson, friend of Dennis Wilson,
pays for studio time to record songs written and performed by
Manson.[88]
- August - Three weeks before his lease on his
house is to run out, Dennis Wilson has his manager evict the Family
members from it.[89]
- October 31 - Having been consolidated at the
Spahn Ranch since the eviction from Dennis Wilson's house, the
Family members set out in a new school bus (purchased September
1)[90]
toward Death
Valley to set up an alternate base.[91]
- November 1 - The Family members arrive at the
Death Valley area's Golar Wash, maybe one hundred twenty miles
north of Los Angeles and ninety miles west of Las Vegas,
Nevada. They load themselves
into the unused Myers Ranch, which is owned by the grandmother of a
new Family member.[91]
- November 3 - When Manson and Family member Paul Watkins take a short
trip from Golar Wash to visit "Ma Barker," owner of another unused
(or little-used) ranch,[92]
not far from Myers, Manson presents himself and Watkins to her as
musicians in need of a residence congenial to their work. When she
agrees to let them stay at the ranch if they'll fix what needs
fixing, Manson honors her with one of The Beach Boys' gold records, several
of which he'd been given by Dennis Wilson. On the way back to Golar
Wash, Watkins, who has seen a newspaper while they've been on their
trek, mentions a police shooting of a young black in San Francisco;
Manson replies that a black revolt has been building up for years.
He says the killing of Martin Luther King, Jr., is a
"heavy number."[91]
- November 13 - Animated movie Yellow Submarine,
based on the song of the same name by The Beatles, is released in the United
States.[93]
- November 25 - Release of the Beatles' White
Album (formal name, The Beatles) in the United States.[94]
(Release in the United Kingdom was November 22.)[94][95][96]
- Mid-December - Family member Paul Watkins and
two female Family members go to Los Angeles for a few days. While
they're there, they see Yellow Submarine.[7]
- Before the end of December - While back at
Spahn Ranch, Manson and Charles "Tex" Watson
visit an acquaintance in nearby Topanga Canyon.
When, in response to a question from the acquaintance, they tell
him they haven't heard the new Beatles album, he plays it for
them.[97]
- New Year's Eve - Around a campfire on a bitter
cold night at the Myers Ranch, the Family members listen as Manson
lays out the prophecy of Helter Skelter.[98]
1969
- ~January 10 - Word comes from Manson, who is
in Los Angeles, that the Family is to move from the desert to a
house he's found in Canoga Park. Because the canary-yellow
house is a place where the Family, preparing for Helter Skelter,
will be "submerged beneath the awareness of the outside world,"
Manson dubs it the Yellow Submarine.[7]
- Mid-February - While riding in a car with Paul Watkins, Manson sees
a white woman and a black man holding hands on the street. He
explains to Watkins that that's why black men have not yet risen up
in rebellion against whites: they're pacified by access to white
women.[7][11]
- Before mid-March - In preparation for a visit
they are for some reason expecting from Dennis Wilson's friend Terry Melcher,
owner of a record company, Family members clean the Canoga Park
house, set up their instruments, and prepare vegetables, lasagna,
salad, French bread, freshly-baked cookies, and marijuana. They are
hoping Melcher will agree to record the music they've been
preparing to trigger Helter Skelter; Melcher doesn't arrive.[4][19]
- March 23 - Entering uninvited upon 10050 Cielo Drive, which he has known as
the residence of Terry Melcher, Manson gets a cool reception from a
male friend of Sharon
Tate, who, with her husband, Roman Polanski, is the new lessee; Tate
looks on. Manson, who possibly knows Melcher no longer lives at the
place, has come calling for someone and is told to check the guest
house; after briefly going back to the guest house, he leaves. In
the evening, when he enters the property again, Manson is received
with an equal lack of enthusiasm, at the guest house, by landlord
Rudi Altobelli, an entertainment-industry figure who had met him
the previous summer through Dennis Wilson. Though Manson asks for
Melcher, he prolongs the conversation with Altobelli and attempts
to establish a connection with him. Altobelli, who will be going to
Europe the next day, lies that he will be out of the United States
for a year; he gives Manson incomplete information about Melcher's
new location. In learning that Manson had been directed to the
guest house by persons at the main house, Altobelli expresses his
wish that Manson not disturb his tenants. Manson leaves; Tate later
asks Altobelli whether "that creepy-looking guy" showed up at the
guest house.[99]
- ~April 1 - The Family starts settling back
into the Spahn Ranch, which they had quit after owner George Spahn,
under pressure from police, had shut down an unlicensed nightclub
they'd set up at the ranch to raise money for their preparations
for Helter Skelter. They will not concern themselves with Spahn's
objections; during Helter Skelter, they must be at Spahn, from
which they'll have a "clear escape route to the desert."[47][65]
- Mid-June - While Manson and Family member Paul
Watkins are discussing Helter Skelter, Manson tells Watkins "it
looks like we're gonna have to show blackie how to do it."[22]
- July 27 - In a dispute over money, Family
member Bobby
Beausoleil acts on Manson's instruction to murder Family
acquaintance Gary Hinman. After stabbing Hinman to death,
Beausoleil writes "Political piggy" on a wall in Hinman's
blood.[100]
- August 6 - Beausoleil is arrested after he is
caught driving Hinman's car; the knife he used to stab Hinman is
found in the car's tire well.[101]
- August 8 - In the afternoon, Manson tells the
Family members, "Now is the time for Helter Skelter."[102]
- August 9 - After midnight, acting on Manson's
instruction, three Family members including Tex Watson slaughter Sharon Tate and four
other persons on the premises of 10050 Cielo
Drive. Susan
Atkins, one of the killers, writes "Pig" on the house's front
door, in Sharon Tate's blood. When the killers and a fourth Family
member, who accompanied them, return to Spahn Ranch, Watson assures
Manson it was Helter Skelter.[103]
- August 10 - After midnight, three Family
members acting on Manson's instruction slaughter Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary at
their Los Feliz home, next door to a house at
which Manson and Family members had attended a party the previous
year.[104]
Using LaBianca blood, one of the killers writes "Rise" and "Death
to Pigs" on the living room walls. She writes "Healter
[sic] Skelter" on the refrigerator.[105][106]
Impact
Tex Watson, who, as
noted above, was with Manson when Manson first heard the White
Album, took part in both the Tate murders and the LaBianca
murders. Indeed, in his own recounting of the crimes, he is the
only killer to participate directly in every one of the seven
homicides and is the sole killer of at least three of the
victims.[106][107]
While awaiting trial, he told other Family members, “It seemed like
I had to do everything.”[108]
On the late 1968 day he and Manson first heard the album, Watson
separated himself from the Family,[92]
which he did not rejoin until the following March (1969). By that
time, Manson’s prophecy had captured the group’s imagination; but
Watson would be a while in grasping its details. In his 1978
autobiography (as told to Ray Hoekstra), he wrote as follows:
- Although I got it in bits and pieces, some from the women and
some from Manson himself, it turned out to be a remarkably
complicated yet consistent thing that he [Manson] had discovered
and developed in the three months we'd been apart.
- ...
- It was exciting, amazing stuff Charlie was teaching, and we'd
sit around him for hours as he told us about the land of milk and
honey we'd find underneath the desert and enjoy while the world
above us was soaked in blood.[4]
Primary
sources
Detail of Helter Skelter is found in the following:
As has been noted, Bugliosi led the prosecution in the
Tate-LaBianca trials; at the time of the trials, he was a Los
Angeles Deputy District
Attorney.[109] Charles Watson is the
above-mentioned Family member who took part in the murders. Watkins was an
above-mentioned Family member who was not involved in the
murders.
Another source is The Family by Ed Sanders (Thunder's Mouth Press, New York,
2002. ISBN 1-56025-396-7). Sanders covered Manson's trial for the
Los Angeles Free Press;[110]
during the trial and in the period that led up to it, he spent time
in the company of Family members.[111] His
book avoids much detail of the Beatle and Bible references, but it
enables the reader to grasp Manson's vision of the Family as
marauders wheeling through Helter Skelter's chaos. (When originally
published, in 1971, the book was entitled The Family: The Story
of Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Attack Battalion.[112])
See also the trial testimony of Gregg Jakobson,
who met Manson at the home of Beach Boy Dennis Wilson in May or early summer of
1968 and who arranged a recording session for Manson in August of
that year.[113]
Jakobson indicated that Manson and he had talked about Manson’s
"philosophy on life" in various settings "innumerable times" –
"Maybe 100."[114]
Addendum: First public
mention
What is apparently the earliest public mention of Helter Skelter
seems to have been made unwittingly. In an article that appeared in
the Los
Angeles Times on Sunday, December 14, 1969, is the
following:
- Then they [i.e., the killers in the LaBianca house] wrote
helter-skelter in the people’s blood on the refrigerator: "Death to
All Pigs" — or something to that effect.[115]
As can be seen, the word helter-skelter, as it appears
in that sentence, is neither capitalized nor in quotation marks. It
is being used in its ordinary sense, to indicate that "'Death to
All Pigs' – or something to that effect" was written helter-skelter, i.e., in confused,
disorderly haste. There is no indication — no apparent awareness on
the part of the author — that the word helter-skelter
itself was written at the LaBianca house.
The newspaper article, a detailed account of the Tate-LaBianca
murders, was entitled "Susan Atkins' Story of 2 Nights of
Murder." It was ghost-written by Los Angeles Times
reporter Jerry Cohen,[116]
whose main source was an audio recording of statements Atkins had
made to her attorney on December 1.[117]
When police gave details of the LaBianca murders to the press,
nothing was said about the "healter [sic] skelter" that
had been written in blood on the refrigerator door; that detail was
not made public.[118]
Accordingly, Cohen, in listening to the audio tape, seems to have
had no reason to think Atkins was using helter-skelter in
an unusual way. He wrote what he heard: that the killers "wrote
helter-skelter" — not that they "wrote 'Helter Skelter.'"
- ^
Bugliosi, Vincent, with Curt Gentry, Helter Skelter -- The True
Story of the Manson Murders 25th Anniversary Edition, W.W.
Norton & Company, 1994. Pages 311-12. ISBN 0-393-08700-X
- ^
Decision in appeal by Charles
Manson and others from conviction for Tate-LaBianca
murdersPeople v. Manson, 61 Cal. App. 3d 102 (California Court of
Appeal, Second District, Division One, August 13, 1976). Retrieved
June 19, 2007. The court's characterization of Helter Skelter as a
"chimerical vision" appears in the third paragraph from the end of
the decision's section headed "The Conspiratorial
Relationship."
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 238-44.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
Watson, Charles as told to
Hoekstra, Ray, Will You Die for Me?, Chapter 11 Watson
website. Retrieved 28 April 2007.
- ^ a
b
Bugliosi 1994, 244.
- ^
Watkins, Paul and Soledad, Guillermo, My Life with Charles
Manson, Chapter 12.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Watkins, Ch. 12
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
Bugliosi 1994, 241.
- ^
Watkins, Ch. 11
- ^
Prosecution's closing
argument. Page 30 of multi-page transcript, 2Violent.com.
Retrieved 28 April 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
Bugliosi 1994, 247.
- ^
a
b Prosecution's closing
argument Page 28 of multi-page transcript, 2Violent.com.
Retrieved 28 April 2007.
- ^
Prosecution's closing
argument Page 6 of multi-page transcript, 2Violent.com.
Retrieved 20 April 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
Testimony of Paul Watkins in
the Charles Manson Trial University of Missouri-Kansas City
School of Law. Retrieved 28 April 2007.
- ^
In trial testimony, Manson
associate Paul Watkins indicated the
militants would be "the Black Muslims." In his autobiography (as told to
Ray Hoekstra), Manson associate Tex Watson said Manson
sometimes indicated the Black Muslims, sometimes the Black
Panthers. On page 246 of the 1994 edition of Bugliosi and
Gentry's Helter Skelter is a similar statement, apparently
based on statements made to Bugliosi by Paul Watkins. In Chapter 10
of the Watkins autobiography, My Life with Charles Manson
(written with Guillermo Soledad), Manson is quoted as follows: "The
heavy dudes, though, are the [Black] Muslims. I’ve seen those cats
in jail. They sit back real stoic like and watch and stay cool, you
know. But they’ll be the ones who bring the shit down. Yeah, it’s
gonna come down hard... a full-on war." The statement predates
Manson's formulation of Helter Skelter.
- ^
Witness Paul Watkins, quoted
in prosecution's closing argument 2Violent.com. Retrieved 16
April 2007.
- ^
In an interview, Family member Tex Watson has indicated
he and Manson first heard the White Album on December 1,
1968;[1] but this does
not appear to match recollections in Watson’s autobiography, in
which, among other things, Watson seems to indicate he and Manson
first heard the album on a Saturday (which December 1 was not).[2] In an
autobiography of his own, the late Paul Watkins, another
Family member, seemed to think Manson first heard the album near
December’s end. This is not the only chronological mismatch between
the recollections of Watkins and Watson.
- ^
Manson 2009
documentary by Cineflix Productions et al.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Watkins, Ch. 13
- ^
Watson, Ch. 12 Retrieved
28 April 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 244-5.
- ^ a
b
c
Watkins, Ch. 15
- ^
Watson, Ch. 13 Retrieved
28 April 2007.
- ^
Watson, Ch. 14 Retrieved
28 April 2007
- ^
Watson, Ch. 15 Retrieve 28
April 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 142 and 143.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 136.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 145.
- ^
Sanders, Ed (2002). The
Family. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press. pp. 11. ISBN
1-56025-396-7.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 137.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
Bugliosi 1994, 240.
- ^ a
b
Sanders 2002, 27.
- ^
"Blue Jay Way" review and
informationallmusic.com. Retrieved June 3, 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 80.
- ^
Watson, Ch. 6
- ^
Watson, Ch. 7 Oddly, the
song seemed to continue to be about Atkins, even after the
murders. When David Dalton and David Felton, in their 1970 Rolling Stone story about
Manson, wrote that "Sexy Sadie laid it down for all to see," they
were referring not to Atkins's sexual frankness but to her crime
account as published within a week of the Tate-LaBianca
indictments. Running nearly three pages when it appeared in the Los
Angeles Times on Sunday, December 14, 1969, the said account was
based mainly on a tape-recorded interview of Atkins by her attorney
at his office on December 1; it detailed the "2 Nights of Murder"
of the Tate-LaBianca crimes. (See Bugliosi 1994, pages 160 and
193.)
- ^
"If Christ Came Back as a Con
Man" by David Dalton, Gadfly, October 1998.
gadflyonline.com. Retrieved 17 September 2007.
- ^ a
b
c
Bugliosi 1994, 242.
- ^
helter skelter,
defined in Compact Oxford English DictionaryRetrieved June 19,
2007.
- ^
helter-skelter,
defined in the American Heritage Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000.Retrieved June 19, 2007.
- ^
Watkins, Ch. 12. As Watkins tells it, Manson said, "Are you hep to
what the Beatles are saying?... Dig it, they’re telling it like it
is. They know what’s happening in the city; blackie is getting
ready. They put the revolution to music... it’s 'Helter-Skelter.'
Helter-Skelter is coming down."
- ^ a
b
c
Sanders 2002, 106.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 242-3.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
Bugliosi 1994, 243.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 241-2.
- ^ a
b
Revolution 9: Minute by
MinuteDavid J. Coyle. Retrieved 30 August 2009.
- ^ a
b
Watson, Ch. 12
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
Bugliosi 1994, 239.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 114.
- ^
Transcript of Charles
Manson's 1992 parole hearing University of Missouri-Kansas City
School of Law. Retrieved May 24, 2007.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 109-10.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 102.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 127.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 138.
- ^
Oral history of the Manson
murders, Steve Oney, Los Angeles magazine, July 2009,
page 152.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 107.
- ^
Sanders 2002,107-8.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 101.
- ^
Prosecution's closing
argument. Page 30 of multi-page transcript, 2Violent.com.
Retrieved 23 February 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 246.
- ^
Paul Watkins (relating
Manson's vision), quoted in Bugliosi 1994, page 246.
- ^
1992 parole hearing
- ^
Sanders 2002, 87.
- ^
Book of Revelation, Chapter
16, King James Version Electronic Text Center, University of
Virginia Library. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
- ^ a
b
Watkins, Ch. 14
- ^ a
b
Sanders 2002, 111.
- ^
Abbey Road review
and informationallmusic.com. Retrieved June 3, 2007.
- ^
Lewisohn, Mark, The Beatles Day by Day -- A Chronology
1962-1969, Harmony Books, New York, 1990. ISBN 0-517-57750-X.
Page 123.
- ^
Schultheiss, Tom (compiler and editor); A Day in the Life, The
Beatles Day-by-Day 1960-1970; Pierian Press, Ann Arbor,
Michigan; 1980. ISBN 0-87650-120-X. Page 266.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 233.
- ^
Schultheiss, 268.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 288.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 126-8.
- ^
Watkins, Ch. 23
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 294.
- ^
Photograph of Spahn Ranch
door University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law.
Retrieved April 29, 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 376.
- ^
In Chapter 3 of his 1978
autobiography, Watson indicated he left the desert camp on October
2, 1969. In a letter of April 1, 2008,
to CNN, he revised this and
indicated he had left around September 25.
- ^
Watson, Ch. 16
- ^
Sanders 2002, 93, 393.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 146.
- ^
Bugliosi, 164 and 174.
- ^
Sanders 2002, 13-20.
- ^
Magical Mystery Tour
review and informationallmusic.com. Retrieved June 3,
2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 174.
- ^
Prosecution's closing
argument Page 2 of multi-page transcript, 2Violent.com.
Retrieved 29 April 2007.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 250.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 214.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 251.
- ^
Watkins, Ch. 8
- ^ a
b
c
Watkins, Ch. 10
- ^ a
b
Watson, Ch. 9
- ^
The Yellow
Submarine at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ a
b
Schultheiss, 226.
- ^
White Album review
and informationallmusic.com. Retrieved June 3, 2007.
- ^
Lewisohn, 110.
- ^
In an interview, Tex Watson has indicated he and Manson first heard
the album on December 1, 1968;[3] but this does
not appear to match recollections in Watson’s autobiography, in
which, among other things, Watson seems to indicate he and Manson
first heard the album on a Saturday (which December 1 was not).[4] In an
autobiography of his own, Family member Paul Watkins seemed to
think Manson first heard the album near December’s end. This is not
the only chronological mismatch between the recollections of
Watkins and Watson.
- ^
Watson, Ch. 12
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 226, 228-31.
- ^
Bugliosi 1994, 33 and 102-3.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 33.
- ^ Watson, Ch. 13
- ^ Watson, Ch. 14
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 182 and
207.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 39.
- ^ a
b
Watson, Ch. 15
- ^ Watson, Ch. 14
- ^ Watkins, Ch. 25
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, xiv and
117.
- ^ Sanders 2002, 330-1.
- ^ Sanders 2002, 341, 346, 349-52,
354-5, 368-9, 376-8, 384-5, 393, 395, 402-3, 427-8, 440, 459.
- ^ The Family, first edition amazon.com.
Retrieved May 24, 2007.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 155, 214.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 223. Also
Jakobson’s trial testimony.
- ^ Susan Atkins’ Story of 2
Nights of Murder Los Angeles Times, Sunday, December
14, 1969. mansonfamilytoday.info. Retrieved April 14, 2008.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 193.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 160, 193.
- ^ Bugliosi 1994, 43.
External
links
- Prosecution's closing argument
in trial of Charles Manson 2Violent.com. Retrieved April 30,
2007.
- Prosecution's closing argument
in trial of Charles Manson Trial Watch. Retrieved April 30,
2007.
- Testimony of Paul Watkins in
the Charles Manson Trial Trial Watch. Retrieved April 30,
2007.
- Book of Revelation, Chapter
9, King James Version Electronic Text Center, University of
Virginia Library. Retrieved April 30, 2007.
- Will You Die for
Me? Charles Watson autobiography as told to Ray Hoekstra,
1978. Watson Website. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
- Testimony of Gregg Jakobson in
the Charles Manson trial truthontatelabianca.com. Retrieved
July 1, 2009.