Something really interesting is that he once lived at No. 93 Jermyn St.
Jermyn St. is a pretty important historical avenue for pipesmokers.
Then, the Berkeley connection,
in 1943, Grady Louis McMurtry, US Army Company Commander, met and was hanging out with Crowley:
The neighborhood he lived in was also where Philip K. Dick (my favorite writer) was living.
Robert Anton Wilson (another great writer) lived around there later on in the early 70's.
Drucquer's was down the street too, at 2201 Shattuck Ave.
http://www.cornelius93.com/photos-berkeleytour.html
All very cool how these things seem to tie together somehow.
Jermyn St. is a pretty important historical avenue for pipesmokers.
Then, the Berkeley connection,
in 1943, Grady Louis McMurtry, US Army Company Commander, met and was hanging out with Crowley:
McMurtry lived in Berkeley after the war, and was working at the Campus Smoke Shop."I would sit down with Crowley at 93 Jermyn Street, playing chess with him, drinking brandy and smoking perique. The black-out blinds would be on the windows. We could hear the German bombers upstairs with their motors revving up and down. The British anti-aircraft over in Trafalger Square would be blasting away, making sheet lightning in the night."
The neighborhood he lived in was also where Philip K. Dick (my favorite writer) was living.
Robert Anton Wilson (another great writer) lived around there later on in the early 70's.
Drucquer's was down the street too, at 2201 Shattuck Ave.
http://www.cornelius93.com/photos-berkeleytour.html
All very cool how these things seem to tie together somehow.
"... just reading Grant's memoirs of Crowley, where it mentions that, at least at the end of his life, Crowley was as much a fan of Latakia as of Perique. Grant mentions that Crowley kept his tobacco tins near his desk (as do I!), and he had one labeled with a Hebrew Lamed for the Latakia, another with the Hebrew Pe for Perique. Grant mentions getting Crowley some Perique at the Dunhill store."









