Woodstock Stage Peace Pendant









Woodstock Stage Peace Pendant




































🎸 From our friends at Peace of Stage! We're excited to offer this beautiful pendant featuring the original 1969 Woodstock stage — this material also appears in the Fifth Edition of the Mini Museum!
Always have a piece of Woodstock magic around your neck and close to your heart, with our Peace Pendant, which is encased with a piece of the original and authenticated stage from the 1969 Woodstock Festival.
- Wood Size: 3/16" thick and 1.2 in diameter.
- Pendant Size: 44 x 33 x 9 millimeters
- Pendant Color Options: Silver or Bronze (Color Plated Metal Alloy)
Every Pendant will include a tamper-proof hologram on the back, as well as on the Peace of Stage Certificate of Authenticity that accompanies the pendant.
Bring the Woodstock magic everywhere you go with this limited edition Peace Pendant, and cherish the memories of the most iconic music festival of all time.
ℹ️ U.S. Shipping Only: This item is only available for shipment in the USA at this time,.

📸 John Sebastian of The Lovin' Spoonful, playing an impromptu Saturday show for the massive Woodstock audience. (Image credit: Henry Diltz)
More About Woodstock and The Original 1969 Woodstock Stage
The year is 1969, and on the property of a dairy farmer in Upstate New York, two music festival organizers are faced with a difficult decision. Should they complete the fencing and ticket booths to collect an income on the concert, or finish the stage so the performers have a proper venue for the weekend? The choice was made for them when tens of thousands of early attendees showed up, necessitating the stage's completion. It was a chaotic beginning fitting for the Woodstock music festival.

📸 August 15, 1969 The opening ceremony at Woodstock with Swami Satchidananda giving the opening speech.
"I'm going on down to Yasgur's farm..."
The concert came at the tail end of one of the most tumultuous decades in United States history. The public at large had turned against President Nixon’s brutal escalation of the war in Vietnam. Demands for Civil Rights boiled over into violent uprisings following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. A generation of young people felt alienated from the system, demanding peace at home and abroad.
Woodstock was the brainchild of two music business executives, Michael Lang and Artie Kornfeld, who wanted to tap into this rising counterculture. Bolstered by financing from Joel Rosenman and John Roberts (who was the wealthy scion of a dental adhesive fortune), the four formed Woodstock Ventures and set about organizing the massive concert, even before a site had been finalized.
Originally, the four had planned to set up at the town of Woodstock in upstate New York, but the residents rejected the concert. Next, Land and Kornfeld tried a nearby farm but were denied again. Rosenman and Roberts then began searching as well to make good on their investments. They tried an industrial park near Wallkill, New York, but the local board passed a new law just to stop the gathering.
Finally, the Woodstock group found a spot at Max Yasgur's dairy farm, where the hill would create a natural slope for seating with the concert stage at the bottom. Even then, residents opposed the concert, with a boycott organized against Yasgur. The stalwart rejections only strengthened the word of mouth however, as many became interested in this countercultural festival. When the Yasgur farm was finally secured, there was just a month to get the space ready for the concert.

📸 Promotional poster for Woodstock designed by Arnold Skolnick.
What followed that August weekend was a momentous event that would define a generation. Over 450,000 people descended upon the Woodstock music festival, far exceeding the expected crowd of 100,000 to 200,000. More than thirty bands stood on this stage and played to the masses. Legendary artists such as Janis Joplin, Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Who, Santana, and Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young electrified the crowds.
In the early hours of Monday August 18, on the final day of the concert, Jimi Hendrix took to the stage and closed the show with iconic renditions of the "Star-Spangled Banner" and "Purple Haze". By then rain had driven away all but about 30,000 concertgoers, who took with them special memories of a watershed moment in the history of music and American culture.

📸 Close-up of the stage from the Fifth Edition Mini Museum Collection
This specimen is a fragment of the original stage that hosted this iconic festival. After the concert, the stage’s plywood was repurposed for use as a local paddle ball court for 48 years until a Woodstock attendee recognized the manufacturer's stamp on the plywood. Today, pieces of the Woodstock stage are on display in the Smithsonian's Museum of American History, bearing the names of the legendary performers who partook in a seismic moment in music history.
We are stardust
We are golden
And we've got to get ourselves
Back to the garden
~ Joni Mitchell "Woodstock" October 22, 1969