Festival of Life · Lincoln Park
Incident Overview · Protest Confrontation

Festival of LifeLincoln Park, Chicago

The Festival of Life opened in Lincoln Park on 25 August 1968 during the Democratic National Convention protest period. Sources describe music in the park, rising tension over permits and staging, an 11 p.m. curfew sweep, and clashes spreading toward Old Town.

Date25 August 1968
LocationLincoln Park
Crowd2,000–5,000 reported
FatalitiesNot verified
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Core Data

Incident
Festival of Life, Lincoln Park, Chicago
Date
25 August 1968
Location
Lincoln Park, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Crowd
About 2,000 at curfew; up to 5,000 reported earlier in the day
Trigger
Festival opened without the permit position protest organisers wanted; police refused a truck as a stage and later enforced the 11 p.m. park curfew
Outcome
Police swept the park; clashes continued between Stockton Drive and Clark Street and into Old Town
Injuries
No verified incident-specific total for 25 August alone
Fatalities
Not verified for this specific incident

Opening Night

The Festival of Life was part of the wider anti-war protest activity surrounding the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The material reviewed places the opening day in Lincoln Park on 25 August 1968.

Music began in the park. Chicago68 records MC5 performing and describes a larger daytime crowd before numbers dropped around the 11 p.m. curfew. ABC7’s retrospective timeline gives about 2,000 attendees based on newspaper reports.

Police refused to allow a truck to be used as a stage, a confrontation followed, and the park was swept at curfew. Reports describe demonstrators being beaten or clubbed and the disorder moving toward Old Town.

The wider convention week was later framed by the Walker Report as involving a “police riot,” but that wider label and the week-long injury totals should not be treated as a clean casualty count for 25 August alone.

View disputed details →

Incident Highlights

1968
Year
Opening day of the Festival of Life in Lincoln Park.
11 PM
Curfew
Police swept the park after the curfew point.
2,000
Curfew Crowd
Reported crowd size around the late-night sweep.
5,000
Daytime Figure
Chicago68 reports this number heard MC5 earlier.

Known Sequence

Festival opens in Lincoln Park
The Yippies’ Festival of Life begins in Lincoln Park as part of the convention-week protest programme.
Music draws a crowd
Chicago68 says 5,000 heard MC5 play for around half an hour; ABC7 later uses about 2,000 attendees from newspaper reporting.
Truck stage refused
Police refused to allow a truck to be used as a stage. Chicago68 reports a fracas followed.
11 p.m. curfew
Most of the remaining crowd left before police swept the park, but violence followed as police moved through Lincoln Park.
Violence spreads
Clashes continued between Stockton Drive and Clark Street and then into the Old Town area.
Wider convention context
Later official and historical sources place the Lincoln Park unrest inside the wider convention-week events later associated with the Walker Report.
📍
Location Strong
Lincoln Park is consistently identified; Stockton Drive, Clark Street and Old Town appear in the post-curfew sequence.
🎸
Music Context Supported
Sources tie the event to the Festival of Life and report music activity in the park, including MC5 in the Chicago68 chronology.
⚖️
Interpretation Disputed
City-side reporting and Walker Report framing differ sharply on police conduct and responsibility.
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Casualty Count Weak
Injury figures found are mainly convention-week totals, not clean totals for 25 August alone.
⚠️ Reporting Caution
Do not use wider convention-week injury figures as the injury total for the 25 August Lincoln Park event. That would be a classic spreadsheet crime.

What Does Not Line Up

Disputed Detail
Estimated Attendance / Crowd Size

Sources appear to describe different points in the day rather than one single headcount.

ABC7 ChicagoReports about 2,000 attendees based on newspaper reports from the time.
Chicago68Says 5,000 heard MC5 play, then says the crowd was around 2,000 by the 11 p.m. curfew.

Editorial note: safest phrasing is that crowd size varied through the day, with around 5,000 reported earlier and around 2,000 near curfew.

Disputed Detail
Injury Totals

No reliable incident-specific injury total for 25 August alone was verified in the reviewed sources.

City-side reportGives convention-week treatment and police injury figures, not a clean 25 August Lincoln Park total.
Walker Report / FJC summaryFrames convention violence as a “police riot,” a wider interpretation rather than a single-night casualty count.

Editorial note: wider convention-week figures belong in context, not in the incident casualty field.

Unverified Details

Injury Total

No precise 25 August-only injury count was verified.

Fatalities

No death was verified for this specific Lincoln Park event.

Micro-location

The exact stage/music setup point inside Lincoln Park was not verified beyond park and nearby street references.

Original Newspaper Links

Some later sources cite contemporary newspapers, but stable direct links were not verified in the reviewed material.

Single Crowd Figure

The 2,000 and 5,000 figures likely refer to different moments, not one fixed attendance.

Convention Week Split

Casualties across the wider week were not cleanly separated from this opening-night event.

Reference Cards

01
ABC7 Chicago · News
Days of Rage: Timeline of the 1968 Democratic National Convention
24 August 2018
Timeline entry for 25 August stating the Festival of Life began in Lincoln Park, reporting about 2,000 attendees, the 11 p.m. police sweep, beatings, and movement into Old Town.
Visit Source →
02
University of Chicago Press · Website
Battleground Chicago: The Police and the 1968 Democratic National Convention
No page date stated
Book excerpt giving permit and background context for the Yippies’ Festival of Life in Lincoln Park.
Visit Source →
03
Chicago68.com · Website
Chicago 1968 Democratic National Convention Chronology Timeline
No page date stated
Key chronology source for 25 August. It records MC5, the truck-stage refusal, the 11 p.m. curfew, and violence between Stockton Drive and Clark Street into Old Town.
Visit Source →
04
Chicago History Museum · Website
Page 18 – Chicago History Museum
No page date stated
Contextual source describing the protest as originally planned as a nonviolent gathering in Lincoln Park before expanding into wider demonstrations.
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05
Internet Archive · Report
Rights in Conflict: Convention Week in Chicago
1968
Internet Archive record for the Walker Report, including the Lincoln Park section and wider convention-week framing.
Visit Source →
06
Pacifica Radio Archives · Audio
A Day In the Park - 1968 Festival of Life
Archive item added 10 April 2008
On-site sound recording from the Festival of Life sequence in Lincoln Park, relevant as archival open-source material.
Visit Source →
07
Chicago Park District · Location
Lincoln (Abraham) Park
No page date stated
Official park page supporting the Lincoln Park location and present-day park references.
Visit Source →
08
Chicago Park District · Location
Lincoln Park Zoo
No page date stated
Official Lincoln Park Zoo page giving a location reference within Lincoln Park, useful because retrospective sources place events near the south park/zoo area.
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09
eScholarship · Academic
Protest, Policing, and Urban Space
2015
Academic source lead discussing the Festival of Life in Lincoln Park and participant figures during the protest sequence.
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10
Chapman University · Academic
Early Protest Theatre by Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin
2009
Academic article discussing the Festival of Life during the 1968 Democratic National Convention and the Chicago 7 context.
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11
Federal Judicial Center · Academic
The Chicago Seven: 1960s Radicalism in the Federal Courts
2011
Official court-history source summarising the Walker Report’s witness base and its “police riot” characterisation.
Visit Source →
12
Chicago Police / Mayor · Report
The Strategy of Confrontation
1968
City-side report giving convention-week injury figures and the official city framing of the disorder.
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