Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Pester> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 61 of
61
with 100 triples per page.
- William_Pester abstract "William Frederick "Bill" Pester (born Friedrich Wilhelm Pester, July 18, 1885 – July 1963) was a German-born American pioneer of hippie lifestyles in California in the first half of the twentieth century, known as "the Hermit of Palm Springs". He was described as epitomizing "the strong link between the 19th century German reformers and the flower children of the 1960s", and inspired the eden ahbez song "Nature Boy", recorded by Nat King Cole and others.".
- William_Pester wikiPageID "47101651".
- William_Pester wikiPageLength "8343".
- William_Pester wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- William_Pester wikiPageRevisionID "674862376".
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Arizona.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Borna,_Leipzig.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Cahuilla_people.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink California_Penal_Code.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:1885_births.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:1963_deaths.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ascetics.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:German_emigrants_to_the_United_States.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Borna.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Riverside_County,_California.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Eden_ahbez.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Folsom_Prison.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Folsom_State_Prison.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Ford_Model_T.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Grove_(nature).
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Hawaii.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Hippie.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Indio,_California.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Karl_May.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Lebensreform.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Los_Angeles.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Nat_King_Cole.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Native_American.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Native_Americans_in_the_United_States.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Nature_Boy.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Palm_Springs.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Palm_Springs,_California.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Parole.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Wild.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Rudolph_Valentino.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink San_Jacinto_Mountains.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink San_Quentin_Prison.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink San_Quentin_State_Prison.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Saxony.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Stonemason.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Stonemasonry.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Tahquitz_Canyon.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Trading_post.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLink Zane_Grey.
- William_Pester wikiPageWikiLinkText "William Pester".
- William_Pester hasPhotoCollection William_Pester.
- William_Pester wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- William_Pester subject Category:1885_births.
- William_Pester subject Category:1963_deaths.
- William_Pester subject Category:Ascetics.
- William_Pester subject Category:German_emigrants_to_the_United_States.
- William_Pester subject Category:People_from_Borna.
- William_Pester subject Category:People_from_Riverside_County,_California.
- William_Pester hypernym Pioneer.
- William_Pester type Person.
- William_Pester comment "William Frederick "Bill" Pester (born Friedrich Wilhelm Pester, July 18, 1885 – July 1963) was a German-born American pioneer of hippie lifestyles in California in the first half of the twentieth century, known as "the Hermit of Palm Springs". He was described as epitomizing "the strong link between the 19th century German reformers and the flower children of the 1960s", and inspired the eden ahbez song "Nature Boy", recorded by Nat King Cole and others.".
- William_Pester label "William Pester".
- William_Pester sameAs Q20714847.
- William_Pester sameAs Q20714847.
- William_Pester wasDerivedFrom William_Pester?oldid=674862376.
- William_Pester isPrimaryTopicOf William_Pester.