Asked by armando

Which was the significance of Woodstock in 1969?
It was the first national protest against the Vietnam War to air on television.
It was one of the first mass student movements to take place.
It was a music festival that epitomized the ideals of the counterculture.
It was a commune that epitomized the ideals of the counterculture.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
It was a music festival that epitomized the ideals of the counterculture.

Woodstock (August 1969, Bethel NY) was a massive rock festival—peace, music, communal spirit, anti‑establishment values and social experimentation—that came to symbolize the 1960s counterculture. It was not primarily a televised Vietnam protest, a student movement, or a long‑term commune.