Furthur
From Free net encyclopedia
Image:Furthur Inside.jpeg Furthur was a 1939 International Harvester school bus purchased by author Ken Kesey in 1964. The bus was stripped down and remodeled inside and out for a psychedelic excursion across the country with Kesey and his Merry Pranksters on board. The destination sign on the bus was painted to read "Further." When Kesey went to Mexico to avoid drug charges, the Pranksters took the bus down to see him, re-painting the manifest to read "Furthur" in a deliberately meek attempt at disguise. This latter spelling is the origin of the popularly misspelled name.
Beat legend Neal Cassady was the driver of the famous bus on its original trip to New York for the opening of Kesey's new book, Sometimes a Great Notion. The trip was filmed by the Merry Pranksters. Other Furthur trips included an anti-Vietnam war rally in 1966 and Woodstock (without Kesey). More can be read about the adventures of the Merry Pranksters on Furthur in Tom Wolfe's book The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test.
The Smithsonian Institution sought to acquire the bus, but Kesey refused to give or sell it to them. In true form, Kesey attempted to prank the venerable Smithsonian by passing off a phony bus. They didn't fall for it.
Furthur was pulled out of a swamp on Kesey's farm in Oregon in November 2005. Plans to restore the bus are afoot.
Trivia
The bus is mentioned in the song "The Other One" by the Grateful Dead, "the bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began...there was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of a bus to never-ever land."
An allusion to the bus appears in the Steely Dan song "Kid Charlemagne", where it is called a "Technicolor motor home".