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Kenwood, St George's Hill

Kenwood is a house on the St George's Hill estate, Weybridge, Surrey, England. Originally called the Brown House, it was designed by architect T. A. Allen, and built in 1913 by Love & Sons, a local building firm. The estate was constructed around the Weybridge Golf Club, which was designed in 1912 by Harry Colt.

Kenwood
General information
Architectural styleTudor revival
Town or cityWeybridge
CountryEngland
Completed1913
ClientNorman H. Johnson
Design and construction
Architect(s)Theophilus Arthur Allen

John Lennon, of the Beatles, bought Kenwood for £20,000 (equivalent to £431,200 in 2021)[1] on 15 July 1964, on the advice of the Beatles' accountants, Walter Strach and James Isherwood. Lennon was resident from the summer of 1964 until the late spring of 1968. Film of the gate and the exterior of the house was included in an ITN programme called Reporting 66 in 1966. Parts of a home movie showing Lennon at Kenwood in 1967 were featured in the film Imagine: John Lennon.

Kenwood is close to Sunny Heights, the former home of Ringo Starr, and a short drive from Kinfauns, George Harrison's former home in Esher. In October 2006, Kenwood went back on the market at a price of £5.95 million; it was sold in January 2007 for £5.8 million.

History edit

Located on Wood Lane, off Cavendish Road, Kenwood was built in a mock-Tudor style in 1913, and was originally called The Brown House.[2] The footprint and gardens cover 1.5 acres (0.61 ha), of which—under the rules of the building scheme—the house must occupy no more than one fifth and the plot may not be subdivided into more than one home. It was designed in 1913 by architect Theophilus Arthur Allen, who had been commissioned by local man Norman H. Johnson.[3] Allen employed a local firm called Love & Sons in the construction of Kenwood.[3] The hill was divided into lots around the Weybridge Golf Club, which was designed by Harry Colt in 1912.[4] Many of the original houses on the estate were built by master builder Walter George Tarrant, whose firm constructed Kenwood's original external garage c. 1920 (it was demolished c. 1995).

Purchase and renovations by John Lennon edit

John Lennon bought the house on 15 July 1964, on the advice of the Beatles' accountants, Walter Strach and James Isherwood.[5][6] Cliff Richard and Tom Jones had earlier bought homes on the St George's Hill estate.[7] Though reportedly not liking Kenwood (describing it as a "stop-over" on the way to something better), Lennon spent £40,000 (were it cash for ordinary expenditure equivalent to £862,000 in 2021)[8] on renovations, reducing its 22 rooms to 17, landscaping the grounds, and building an outdoor swimming pool, constructed by a local skilled tradesman, Fred Borley.[9] Much of the initial decoration was left to interior designer Kenneth Partridge, whom Lennon employed after being impressed by his design work at a lavish party held by Beatles' manager Brian Epstein to celebrate the Beatles' departure for their first tour of the United States.[10] However, when Partridge had completed his work, Lennon and then-wife Cynthia immediately made a number of further alterations which better reflected their taste.[11] Cynthia's mother was given an allowance to fill the shelves of the house with antiques and antiquarian books, and a heavy sliding wooden door was installed at the gate entrance to keep out fans.[12]

Kenwood has three floors. On the ground floor during the Lennon period the front door opened onto an entrance hall, wherein Lennon placed a suit of armour and a gorilla suit. Across the hall was a large living room, which had black carpets, two 18-foot sofas and a marble fireplace.[13] To the left of the hall was a toilet, and through the living room was a dining room, where purple velvet wallpaper was put up.[14] Adjacent to the dining room, at the back of the house, was a small sunroom. This was decorated with various pictures, caricatures and stickers, such as the one from Safe as Milk (the 1967 debut album by Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band) and one advertising the Monterey Pop Festival.[15][16] Photos published by The Beatles Book Monthly show the shelves of the sunroom filled with articles such as a large, ornate cross, a Mickey Mouse doll, and a mortar and pestle, reportedly used by Lennon to mix various combinations of cocaine, amphetamine, barbiturates and LSD.[17][18] There was also a yellow sofa or chaise-longue upon which Lennon would spend much of his time. This was a present from his aunt Elizabeth Smith (née Stanley), also known as Mimi.[19] Behind the sunroom was the split-level kitchen where state-of-the-art appliances were installed, so complex that a tutor had to come and give the Lennons lessons in their use.[20]

Completing the ground floor was a smaller lounge, and a large garage. The main staircase to the upper floors was situated in the entrance hall. The house had six bedrooms, with five on the first floor. The giant master bedroom featured a huge double bed, white carpets and an en-suite bathroom complete with sunken bathtub, shower, Jacuzzi and 'his and hers' wash basins.[21] Lennon wanted the guest bedrooms to contain works of art by students of the Liverpool Art College.[22] In particular, two drawings by late Beatles' bassist Stuart Sutcliffe were hung, for what Lennon described as "sentimental reasons".[23][24] The first floor also had a study. On the top floor was the attic, which Lennon claimed as his own, painting the ceiling one bright colour, then changing to another when the paint ran out, and installing most of his musical equipment there.[24] Outside the house, seen to the right when looking down from the sunroom, lay the swimming pool. In 1967, Lennon suggested a mirrored bottom for the pool; being advised that this would be not only impractical and expensive, but potentially dangerous to swimmers, he settled for a large eye mosaic set in the side.[25] The mosaic was based on the Eye of Knowledge, which was part of the teachings of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.[26]

Staff edit

The Lennons initially had problems recruiting reliable staff, but eventually employed a cook/housekeeper (Dorothy Jarlett, or Dot), a chauffeur (Les Anthony), and a groundskeeper.[27][28] Lennon was surprised and impressed to discover that the groundskeeper had "dropped out" of university to pursue his love of horticulture.[29] Others employed at Kenwood included Lennon's schoolfriend Pete Shotton, who worked as his personal assistant in the early part of 1968, and Pauline Jones, who was the girlfriend (later wife) of Lennon's father, Alfred Lennon. Jones worked as an au pair and secretary, answering the large volume of fan mail received at Kenwood, during late 1967.[30][31][32]

Songwriting edit

Lennon did much of his songwriting in the attic, where he had several Studer tape recorders.[33] Little was done with them until fellow Beatle Paul McCartney visited and helped re-install them in sequence, so overdubs could be made.[34] Lennon could thus record his own double-tracked song demos. (These demos, and some other, more avant garde sound recordings also made in the attic, have appeared on various bootlegs). The attic also contained a mellotron, an electronic organ, a piano, a Vox AC30 amplifier and several guitars (including his first Rickenbacker 325, a Höfner Senator, and a Rickenbacker 1996), all of which were used when songwriting. Lennon also wrote on an upright piano in the sunroom.[35]

Recreation edit

Aside from the mini-studio, the attic contained two other rooms: a small guest bedroom and a games room used for recreation. Lennon filled it with three full sets of the model car racing game Scalextric.[36] When not in the attic, Lennon could usually be found in the sunroom watching television or reading newspapers. He would also walk in the garden with his black cat on his shoulder (he had ten cats in total).[37][38] His drug intake, particularly LSD and hashish, but also amphetamine, was high for much of the time he lived at Kenwood.[39] Drugs were taken there in the company of people such as Marianne Faithfull's ex-husband John Dunbar and art dealer Robert Fraser.[40] At one stage, under the influence of transcendental meditation, Lennon renounced both meat-eating and drugs, and buried a huge quantity of LSD in the garden, which had been obtained by representatives of the Beatles at the Monterey Pop Festival from Augustus Stanley Owsley III.[41] He later tried to find the LSD, but could not remember where he had buried it. Although none of the lavish parties they had planned took place – which remained a source of disappointment to Cynthia – various guests (including Monkee Michael Nesmith and his wife Phyllis, Bob Dylan and Peter Cook) stayed or dined at the house, together with old friends like Ivan Vaughan and Shotton from Liverpool, or strangers Lennon had met at a party or nightclub, such as the Ad Lib.[42] Cynthia and Lennon were beginning to lead separate lives by 1967, and it was not uncommon for Cynthia to wake up in the morning to find the house filled with people in various states of intoxication whom Lennon had met the previous night in clubs.[43] Large parts of the house were unused by the Lennons, and visitors remarked that there was frequently a strange atmosphere.[44]

Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Cynthia edit

In 1968, Cynthia went on vacation to Greece, leaving Lennon at Kenwood with Shotton. After several days of taking LSD and smoking marijuana, Lennon convened a meeting at the Beatles' business HQ to inform the others that he felt he was the reincarnation of Jesus Christ.[45] Later that day he phoned his artist friend Yoko Ono, whose husband Tony Cox was in Paris on business, and invited her to Kenwood. Shotton left the two alone, whereupon Lennon invited Ono (who had also taken LSD) up to the attic to hear his largely experimental non-Beatles recordings. For the rest of the night the two collaborated on what became the Two Virgins album, and then "made love at dawn", according to Lennon.[46] Cynthia returned early from her vacation, and discovered Lennon and Ono sitting cross-legged on the floor and staring intently into each other's eyes (Ono was wearing one of Cynthia's bathrobes). In a state of shock, Cynthia then left to stay with friends for a few days, although Lennon and Cynthia were reconciled for a time upon her return to Kenwood.[47]

It was during Cynthia's next holiday in Italy that Lennon and Ono finally entered into a permanent relationship, and Lennon asked for a divorce. Cynthia, together with Julian and her mother, moved back into Kenwood for the summer, where Paul McCartney visited her to offer his support.[48][49] On the journey to Kenwood he composed the song "Hey Jude", which eventually became the Beatles' biggest-selling single.[50] Lennon and Ono, meanwhile, were without a permanent address for a time. They stayed with McCartney at his house in Cavendish Avenue and with Peter Brown and then Neil Aspinall, before moving into an apartment leased by Ringo Starr at 34 Montagu Square, Marylebone in London.[51][52] They were evicted from this flat by the owner following a raid by the drug squad on 18 October 1968, and subsequent November trial, and so moved back into Kenwood for a short time, which had been vacated by Cynthia.[53] In the new year Ono and Lennon moved into the Dorchester Hotel in London, leaving Kenwood for the last time.[54]

Film/interview/photos edit

Film of the exterior of the house and the gate was included in Reporting 66, a programme produced by ITN, in 1966.[55] Parts of a home movie showing Lennon at Kenwood, in 1967, were featured in the film Imagine: John Lennon.[56] This had Lennon in the company of his son Julian Lennon, Starr, and the gardener at Kenwood. It also shows Lennon standing in the sunroom. Lennon and Yoko Ono were filmed at the side of the house singing the "Everybody had a hard year" section of the Beatles' song "I've Got a Feeling", and made two art films in the grounds in 1968: Number 5 a.k.a. Smile, and Two Virgins.[57] Lennon was interviewed several times on audio tape at Kenwood; interviewers included Ray Coleman and Kenny Everett.[58][59] Several photo sessions also took place at Kenwood, the most famous of which provided the cover photo for the Beatles' 1965 album Rubber Soul.[60]

Kenwood after the Lennons edit

As Lennon and Cynthia were getting divorced, it became clear that Lennon did not wish to keep Kenwood, and Cynthia could not afford to maintain it on her own, so it was sold in December 1968, for a reputed £40,000 (equivalent to £738,000 in 2021).[1][61] to Bill Martin, writer of songs such as "Puppet on a String" and "Congratulations".[62] Kenwood has had a succession of owners, and some major renovations. The interior now little resembles the house that Lennon lived in. The sunroom has been completely rebuilt. The exterior and grounds are similar. After being displayed at the Liverpool International Garden Festival in 1984, the psychedelic eye mosaic was unclaimed, and left in a field. It was rediscovered and restored by Tom Lorimer, a laboratory technician at the Liverpool John Moores University, to be displayed at the Museum of Liverpool Life.[63] Items from Lennon's Kenwood period have also appeared for auction, including towels and cutlery, a caviar jar, and the table that sat in the sunroom.[64] Lennon kept the Kenwood house sign after he left, but gave it to Andy Eccles, a gardener at Tittenhurst Park, in 1972. It was sold for US$20,400 in 2003.[6] In October 2006, Kenwood went back on the market, initially seeking up to £150,000 more, was sold three months later for £5.8 million.[65] It has been claimed each owner after the Lennons has sold it owing to divorce.[38][66]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  2. ^ "John Lennon's Home for Sale". Propeller. Archived from the original on 19 January 2008. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  3. ^ a b Inventory of Tarrant Built Houses on St George's Hill (1992)
  4. ^ Smith, Stewart. "St George's Hill Golf Club". St George's Hill Golf Club. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  5. ^ Coleman 2000, p. 721.
  6. ^ a b . It's Only Rock n Roll. 2003. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  7. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 199.
  8. ^ Spitz 2005, pp. 514–515.
  9. ^ Davies 2002, p. 323.
  10. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 129.
  11. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 201.
  12. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 228.
  13. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 2.
  14. ^ Coleman 2000, p. 343.
  15. ^ Davies 2002, p. 324.
  16. ^ . Beefheart, Captain. Archived from the original on 16 June 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  17. ^ Vyner 1999, p. 136.
  18. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 4.
  19. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 247.
  20. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 145.
  21. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 235.
  22. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 130.
  23. ^ Miles 1997, p. 170.
  24. ^ a b Coleman 2000, p. 344.
  25. ^ Coleman 2000, p. 333.
  26. ^ Miles 1997, p. 397.
  27. ^ Giuliano 1997, p. 228.
  28. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 202.
  29. ^ Shotton & Schaffner 1983, p. 103.
  30. ^ Shotton & Schaffner 1983, p. 163.
  31. ^ Lennon 1990, p. 147.
  32. ^ . Liverpool Lennons. 2004. Archived from the original on 14 June 2008. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  33. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 224.
  34. ^ Sandford 2006, p. 153.
  35. ^ Shotton & Schaffner 1983, p. 121.
  36. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 223.
  37. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 204.
  38. ^ a b Angela Reardon 2006-Lived Next Door to Kenwood 1960–2000
  39. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 196.
  40. ^ Vyner 1999, p. 175.
  41. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 220.
  42. ^ Lennon 2005, pp. 218–220.
  43. ^ Lennon 1978, p. 142.
  44. ^ Lennon 1990, p. 149.
  45. ^ Shotton & Schaffner 1983, pp. 167–168.
  46. ^ Shotton & Schaffner 1983, p. 168.
  47. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 290.
  48. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 297.
  49. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 302.
  50. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 266.
  51. ^ Giuliano 2005.
  52. ^ Brown & Gaines 1984, p. 267.
  53. ^ Goldman 1989, p. 381.
  54. ^ Lennon 2005, p. 354.
  55. ^ Miles 1998, p. 227.
  56. ^ . Apple Corps. Archived from the original on 13 December 2010. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  57. ^ J Hoberman – The Films of John And Yoko (The Ballad of John And Yoko – Rolling Stone 1982) p264
  58. ^ Coleman 2000, p. 365.
  59. ^ Lewisohn & Martin 1996, p. 279.
  60. ^ Kindersley 2004, p. 194.
  61. ^ Ross, Maris (5 January 1969). "Beatles Break Up; Seek New Homes". Press-Courier. p. 21.
  62. ^ Bowron, Steven (26 December 2004). . Sunday Post. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  63. ^ Batchelor, Will; Brown, Chris (23 August 2002). "History of musical legends on display". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  64. ^ . It's Only Rock n Roll. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  65. ^ Woollard, Diedre (10 October 2006). "John Lennon's House For Sale". Luxist. Retrieved 10 June 2011.
  66. ^ "Kenwood property listing at Jan 2013". 9 January 2013. Retrieved 9 January 2013.

References edit

External links edit

51°21′20″N 0°26′47″W / 51.355522°N 0.446335°W / 51.355522; -0.446335

  • Resource Forum dedicated to John Lennon at Kenwood 1964–1968
  • Photoblog dedicated to Kenwood

kenwood, george, hill, kenwood, house, george, hill, estate, weybridge, surrey, england, originally, called, brown, house, designed, architect, allen, built, 1913, love, sons, local, building, firm, estate, constructed, around, weybridge, golf, club, which, de. Kenwood is a house on the St George s Hill estate Weybridge Surrey England Originally called the Brown House it was designed by architect T A Allen and built in 1913 by Love amp Sons a local building firm The estate was constructed around the Weybridge Golf Club which was designed in 1912 by Harry Colt KenwoodGeneral informationArchitectural styleTudor revivalTown or cityWeybridgeCountryEnglandCompleted1913ClientNorman H JohnsonDesign and constructionArchitect s Theophilus Arthur AllenJohn Lennon of the Beatles bought Kenwood for 20 000 equivalent to 431 200 in 2021 1 on 15 July 1964 on the advice of the Beatles accountants Walter Strach and James Isherwood Lennon was resident from the summer of 1964 until the late spring of 1968 Film of the gate and the exterior of the house was included in an ITN programme called Reporting 66 in 1966 Parts of a home movie showing Lennon at Kenwood in 1967 were featured in the film Imagine John Lennon Kenwood is close to Sunny Heights the former home of Ringo Starr and a short drive from Kinfauns George Harrison s former home in Esher In October 2006 Kenwood went back on the market at a price of 5 95 million it was sold in January 2007 for 5 8 million Contents 1 History 2 Purchase and renovations by John Lennon 2 1 Staff 2 2 Songwriting 2 3 Recreation 2 4 Lennon Yoko Ono and Cynthia 2 5 Film interview photos 3 Kenwood after the Lennons 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory editLocated on Wood Lane off Cavendish Road Kenwood was built in a mock Tudor style in 1913 and was originally called The Brown House 2 The footprint and gardens cover 1 5 acres 0 61 ha of which under the rules of the building scheme the house must occupy no more than one fifth and the plot may not be subdivided into more than one home It was designed in 1913 by architect Theophilus Arthur Allen who had been commissioned by local man Norman H Johnson 3 Allen employed a local firm called Love amp Sons in the construction of Kenwood 3 The hill was divided into lots around the Weybridge Golf Club which was designed by Harry Colt in 1912 4 Many of the original houses on the estate were built by master builder Walter George Tarrant whose firm constructed Kenwood s original external garage c 1920 it was demolished c 1995 Purchase and renovations by John Lennon editJohn Lennon bought the house on 15 July 1964 on the advice of the Beatles accountants Walter Strach and James Isherwood 5 6 Cliff Richard and Tom Jones had earlier bought homes on the St George s Hill estate 7 Though reportedly not liking Kenwood describing it as a stop over on the way to something better Lennon spent 40 000 were it cash for ordinary expenditure equivalent to 862 000 in 2021 8 on renovations reducing its 22 rooms to 17 landscaping the grounds and building an outdoor swimming pool constructed by a local skilled tradesman Fred Borley 9 Much of the initial decoration was left to interior designer Kenneth Partridge whom Lennon employed after being impressed by his design work at a lavish party held by Beatles manager Brian Epstein to celebrate the Beatles departure for their first tour of the United States 10 However when Partridge had completed his work Lennon and then wife Cynthia immediately made a number of further alterations which better reflected their taste 11 Cynthia s mother was given an allowance to fill the shelves of the house with antiques and antiquarian books and a heavy sliding wooden door was installed at the gate entrance to keep out fans 12 Kenwood has three floors On the ground floor during the Lennon period the front door opened onto an entrance hall wherein Lennon placed a suit of armour and a gorilla suit Across the hall was a large living room which had black carpets two 18 foot sofas and a marble fireplace 13 To the left of the hall was a toilet and through the living room was a dining room where purple velvet wallpaper was put up 14 Adjacent to the dining room at the back of the house was a small sunroom This was decorated with various pictures caricatures and stickers such as the one from Safe as Milk the 1967 debut album by Captain Beefheart amp His Magic Band and one advertising the Monterey Pop Festival 15 16 Photos published by The Beatles Book Monthly show the shelves of the sunroom filled with articles such as a large ornate cross a Mickey Mouse doll and a mortar and pestle reportedly used by Lennon to mix various combinations of cocaine amphetamine barbiturates and LSD 17 18 There was also a yellow sofa or chaise longue upon which Lennon would spend much of his time This was a present from his aunt Elizabeth Smith nee Stanley also known as Mimi 19 Behind the sunroom was the split level kitchen where state of the art appliances were installed so complex that a tutor had to come and give the Lennons lessons in their use 20 Completing the ground floor was a smaller lounge and a large garage The main staircase to the upper floors was situated in the entrance hall The house had six bedrooms with five on the first floor The giant master bedroom featured a huge double bed white carpets and an en suite bathroom complete with sunken bathtub shower Jacuzzi and his and hers wash basins 21 Lennon wanted the guest bedrooms to contain works of art by students of the Liverpool Art College 22 In particular two drawings by late Beatles bassist Stuart Sutcliffe were hung for what Lennon described as sentimental reasons 23 24 The first floor also had a study On the top floor was the attic which Lennon claimed as his own painting the ceiling one bright colour then changing to another when the paint ran out and installing most of his musical equipment there 24 Outside the house seen to the right when looking down from the sunroom lay the swimming pool In 1967 Lennon suggested a mirrored bottom for the pool being advised that this would be not only impractical and expensive but potentially dangerous to swimmers he settled for a large eye mosaic set in the side 25 The mosaic was based on the Eye of Knowledge which was part of the teachings of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 26 Staff edit The Lennons initially had problems recruiting reliable staff but eventually employed a cook housekeeper Dorothy Jarlett or Dot a chauffeur Les Anthony and a groundskeeper 27 28 Lennon was surprised and impressed to discover that the groundskeeper had dropped out of university to pursue his love of horticulture 29 Others employed at Kenwood included Lennon s schoolfriend Pete Shotton who worked as his personal assistant in the early part of 1968 and Pauline Jones who was the girlfriend later wife of Lennon s father Alfred Lennon Jones worked as an au pair and secretary answering the large volume of fan mail received at Kenwood during late 1967 30 31 32 Songwriting edit Lennon did much of his songwriting in the attic where he had several Studer tape recorders 33 Little was done with them until fellow Beatle Paul McCartney visited and helped re install them in sequence so overdubs could be made 34 Lennon could thus record his own double tracked song demos These demos and some other more avant garde sound recordings also made in the attic have appeared on various bootlegs The attic also contained a mellotron an electronic organ a piano a Vox AC30 amplifier and several guitars including his first Rickenbacker 325 a Hofner Senator and a Rickenbacker 1996 all of which were used when songwriting Lennon also wrote on an upright piano in the sunroom 35 Recreation edit Aside from the mini studio the attic contained two other rooms a small guest bedroom and a games room used for recreation Lennon filled it with three full sets of the model car racing game Scalextric 36 When not in the attic Lennon could usually be found in the sunroom watching television or reading newspapers He would also walk in the garden with his black cat on his shoulder he had ten cats in total 37 38 His drug intake particularly LSD and hashish but also amphetamine was high for much of the time he lived at Kenwood 39 Drugs were taken there in the company of people such as Marianne Faithfull s ex husband John Dunbar and art dealer Robert Fraser 40 At one stage under the influence of transcendental meditation Lennon renounced both meat eating and drugs and buried a huge quantity of LSD in the garden which had been obtained by representatives of the Beatles at the Monterey Pop Festival from Augustus Stanley Owsley III 41 He later tried to find the LSD but could not remember where he had buried it Although none of the lavish parties they had planned took place which remained a source of disappointment to Cynthia various guests including Monkee Michael Nesmith and his wife Phyllis Bob Dylan and Peter Cook stayed or dined at the house together with old friends like Ivan Vaughan and Shotton from Liverpool or strangers Lennon had met at a party or nightclub such as the Ad Lib 42 Cynthia and Lennon were beginning to lead separate lives by 1967 and it was not uncommon for Cynthia to wake up in the morning to find the house filled with people in various states of intoxication whom Lennon had met the previous night in clubs 43 Large parts of the house were unused by the Lennons and visitors remarked that there was frequently a strange atmosphere 44 Lennon Yoko Ono and Cynthia edit In 1968 Cynthia went on vacation to Greece leaving Lennon at Kenwood with Shotton After several days of taking LSD and smoking marijuana Lennon convened a meeting at the Beatles business HQ to inform the others that he felt he was the reincarnation of Jesus Christ 45 Later that day he phoned his artist friend Yoko Ono whose husband Tony Cox was in Paris on business and invited her to Kenwood Shotton left the two alone whereupon Lennon invited Ono who had also taken LSD up to the attic to hear his largely experimental non Beatles recordings For the rest of the night the two collaborated on what became the Two Virgins album and then made love at dawn according to Lennon 46 Cynthia returned early from her vacation and discovered Lennon and Ono sitting cross legged on the floor and staring intently into each other s eyes Ono was wearing one of Cynthia s bathrobes In a state of shock Cynthia then left to stay with friends for a few days although Lennon and Cynthia were reconciled for a time upon her return to Kenwood 47 It was during Cynthia s next holiday in Italy that Lennon and Ono finally entered into a permanent relationship and Lennon asked for a divorce Cynthia together with Julian and her mother moved back into Kenwood for the summer where Paul McCartney visited her to offer his support 48 49 On the journey to Kenwood he composed the song Hey Jude which eventually became the Beatles biggest selling single 50 Lennon and Ono meanwhile were without a permanent address for a time They stayed with McCartney at his house in Cavendish Avenue and with Peter Brown and then Neil Aspinall before moving into an apartment leased by Ringo Starr at 34 Montagu Square Marylebone in London 51 52 They were evicted from this flat by the owner following a raid by the drug squad on 18 October 1968 and subsequent November trial and so moved back into Kenwood for a short time which had been vacated by Cynthia 53 In the new year Ono and Lennon moved into the Dorchester Hotel in London leaving Kenwood for the last time 54 Film interview photos edit Film of the exterior of the house and the gate was included in Reporting 66 a programme produced by ITN in 1966 55 Parts of a home movie showing Lennon at Kenwood in 1967 were featured in the film Imagine John Lennon 56 This had Lennon in the company of his son Julian Lennon Starr and the gardener at Kenwood It also shows Lennon standing in the sunroom Lennon and Yoko Ono were filmed at the side of the house singing the Everybody had a hard year section of the Beatles song I ve Got a Feeling and made two art films in the grounds in 1968 Number 5 a k a Smile and Two Virgins 57 Lennon was interviewed several times on audio tape at Kenwood interviewers included Ray Coleman and Kenny Everett 58 59 Several photo sessions also took place at Kenwood the most famous of which provided the cover photo for the Beatles 1965 album Rubber Soul 60 Kenwood after the Lennons editAs Lennon and Cynthia were getting divorced it became clear that Lennon did not wish to keep Kenwood and Cynthia could not afford to maintain it on her own so it was sold in December 1968 for a reputed 40 000 equivalent to 738 000 in 2021 1 61 to Bill Martin writer of songs such as Puppet on a String and Congratulations 62 Kenwood has had a succession of owners and some major renovations The interior now little resembles the house that Lennon lived in The sunroom has been completely rebuilt The exterior and grounds are similar After being displayed at the Liverpool International Garden Festival in 1984 the psychedelic eye mosaic was unclaimed and left in a field It was rediscovered and restored by Tom Lorimer a laboratory technician at the Liverpool John Moores University to be displayed at the Museum of Liverpool Life 63 Items from Lennon s Kenwood period have also appeared for auction including towels and cutlery a caviar jar and the table that sat in the sunroom 64 Lennon kept the Kenwood house sign after he left but gave it to Andy Eccles a gardener at Tittenhurst Park in 1972 It was sold for US 20 400 in 2003 6 In October 2006 Kenwood went back on the market initially seeking up to 150 000 more was sold three months later for 5 8 million 65 It has been claimed each owner after the Lennons has sold it owing to divorce 38 66 See also edit251 Menlove Avenue Tittenhurst Park The DakotaNotes edit a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 John Lennon s Home for Sale Propeller Archived from the original on 19 January 2008 Retrieved 10 June 2011 a b Inventory of Tarrant Built Houses on St George s Hill 1992 Smith Stewart St George s Hill Golf Club St George s Hill Golf Club Retrieved 10 June 2011 Coleman 2000 p 721 a b John Lennon s Kenwood Estate Sign It s Only Rock n Roll 2003 Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Lennon 2005 p 199 Spitz 2005 pp 514 515 Davies 2002 p 323 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 129 Lennon 2005 p 201 Lennon 2005 p 228 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 2 Coleman 2000 p 343 Davies 2002 p 324 John Lennon on the couch Beefheart Captain Archived from the original on 16 June 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Vyner 1999 p 136 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 4 Lennon 2005 p 247 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 145 Lennon 2005 p 235 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 130 Miles 1997 p 170 a b Coleman 2000 p 344 Coleman 2000 p 333 Miles 1997 p 397 Giuliano 1997 p 228 Lennon 2005 p 202 Shotton amp Schaffner 1983 p 103 Shotton amp Schaffner 1983 p 163 Lennon 1990 p 147 Pauline Lennon Liverpool Lennons 2004 Archived from the original on 14 June 2008 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Lennon 2005 p 224 Sandford 2006 p 153 Shotton amp Schaffner 1983 p 121 Lennon 2005 p 223 Lennon 2005 p 204 a b Angela Reardon 2006 Lived Next Door to Kenwood 1960 2000 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 196 Vyner 1999 p 175 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 220 Lennon 2005 pp 218 220 Lennon 1978 p 142 Lennon 1990 p 149 Shotton amp Schaffner 1983 pp 167 168 Shotton amp Schaffner 1983 p 168 Lennon 2005 p 290 Lennon 2005 p 297 Lennon 2005 p 302 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 266 Giuliano 2005 Brown amp Gaines 1984 p 267 Goldman 1989 p 381 Lennon 2005 p 354 Miles 1998 p 227 John Lennon Imagine 1988 Apple Corps Archived from the original on 13 December 2010 Retrieved 10 June 2011 J Hoberman The Films of John And Yoko The Ballad of John And Yoko Rolling Stone 1982 p264 Coleman 2000 p 365 Lewisohn amp Martin 1996 p 279 Kindersley 2004 p 194 Ross Maris 5 January 1969 Beatles Break Up Seek New Homes Press Courier p 21 Bowron Steven 26 December 2004 Bill Martin Sunday Post Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Batchelor Will Brown Chris 23 August 2002 History of musical legends on display Liverpool Echo Retrieved 10 June 2011 John Lennon s Caviar Jar It s Only Rock n Roll Archived from the original on 15 December 2007 Retrieved 10 June 2011 Woollard Diedre 10 October 2006 John Lennon s House For Sale Luxist Retrieved 10 June 2011 Kenwood property listing at Jan 2013 9 January 2013 Retrieved 9 January 2013 References editBrown Peter Gaines Steven 1984 The Love You Make Pan ISBN 978 0 330 28227 7 Coleman Ray 2000 Lennon The Definitive Biography Pan ISBN 978 0 330 48330 8 Davies Hunter 2002 The Beatles Cassell Illustrated ISBN 978 0 304 36264 6 Giuliano Geoffrey 1997 The Lost Lennon Interviews Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 6470 9 Giuliano Geoffrey 2005 Revolver The Secret History of The Beatles John Blake ISBN 978 1 84454 160 7 Goldman Albert 1989 The Lives of John Lennon Bantam Books ISBN 978 0 553 17542 4 Kindersley Dorling 2004 10 Years That Shook the World Dorling Kindersley Ltd ISBN 978 0 7566 0670 1 Lennon Cynthia 1978 A Twist of Lennon Star ISBN 978 0 352 30196 3 Lennon Cynthia 2005 John Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 89512 2 Lennon Pauline 1990 Daddy Come Home Angus and Robertsons ISBN 978 0 207 16996 0 Lewisohn Mark Martin George 1996 The Complete Beatles Chronicle Chancellor Press ISBN 978 1 85152 975 9 Miles Barry 1997 Many Years From Now Vintage Random House ISBN 978 0 7493 8658 0 Miles Barry 1998 The Beatles A Diary Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 6315 3 Sandford Christopher 2006 McCartney Century ISBN 978 0 09 947130 1 Spitz Bob 2005 The Beatles The Biography Little Brown and Company New York ISBN 978 1 84513 160 9 Shotton Pete Schaffner Nicholas 1983 John Lennon In My Life Coronet ISBN 978 0 340 34699 0 Swenarton Mavis 1992 Inventory of Tarrant Built Houses on St George s Hill Walton and Weybridge Local History Society Vyner Harriet 1999 Groovy Bob The Life And Times of Robert Fraser Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 20575 2 External links edit51 21 20 N 0 26 47 W 51 355522 N 0 446335 W 51 355522 0 446335 Resource Forum dedicated to John Lennon at Kenwood 1964 1968 Photoblog dedicated to Kenwood Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kenwood St George 27s Hill amp oldid 1179827417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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