Went to Woodstock with friends in 1969. I had bought these tickets in advance. By the time I got to Woodstock (haha), there was nobody to accept or tear the tickets. We were able to sit to the left of the stage as soon as Richie Havens started. Only stayed there for a day and a half. My friends and I were soaked so we traveled to nearby Middletown where the towns people greeted us with open air picnic tables and lots of food and drinks in their public park. It was a wonderful experience.

    by foxeyfree123

    26 Comments

    1. CantTouchThis707 on

      Wow! I was too stupid to save my concert ticket stubs. Good for you. Exceptionally cool. Probably worth a pretty penny too.

    2. Furrowed_Brow710 on

      In a world where all tickets have gone digital…all our old stubs will one day be worth a ton.

    3. pm_me_ur_McNuggets on

      Keep these forever and pass them down.
      Maybe consider getting them authenticated.

    4. I still have my Woodstock ticket for Sunday. We didn’t want to pay $21 for the whole weekend, but we did want to see Hendrix. I was working as a lifeguard that summer. $21 was 2 days pay. Unfortunately I never got there. Started out late the roads were jammed. Didn’t know it was going to be as big a thing as it was

    5. I had a professor who bought tickets. However, as the weekend approached, he saw that the weather was going to be bad and didn’t think a lot of people would go. So, he decided not to go.

      I think it haunts him to this day.

    6. 7.00 adjusted for inflation is 62.04 X 3 is 186.12.

      God that is so much better than today.

    7. The Venn diagram of people that went to Woodstock and people that save ticket stubs

    8. I remember watching the news reports about Woodstock, in about a month I was gonna turn 11 years old.

    9. I remember some ads in Rolling Stone back in the 70’s selling unused Woodstock tickets.

    10. You couldn’t even go and see a shitty local band of teenagers for $21 these days.

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