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Beatle John Lennon school detention sheets put up for sale

on Montag, 11 November 2013. Posted in General Autograph News

Detention sheets describing Beatle John Lennon's schoolboy misdemeanours are being put up for sale.

Teachers from Liverpool's Quarry Bank High School for Boys wrote that 15-year-old Lennon was punished for "fighting in class" and "sabotage".

The two documents from 1955 were rescued by a teacher in the 1970s who had been told to burn all of the books in a storage room at the school.

The sheets are expected to be sold for up to £3,000 each at auction.

The documents reveal that on two occasions Lennon received three detentions in one day.

Other reasons given by his teachers for punishment include "nuisance", "shoving" and "just no interest whatsoever".

'Class clown'

The sheets cover the periods when he was in Class 3B between 19 May and 23 June 1955, and in Class 4C from 25 November 1955 to 13 February 1956.

Lennon went on to meet Paul McCartney in 1957 and together they formed the Beatles, who had their first hit in late 1962 with the song Love Me Do.

That kick-started a career which brought fame and fortune and songs that have influenced generations of musicians since.

The details of the young Lennon's detentions were discovered by an enterprising teacher in the late 1970s.

He had been asked to clear out a storage room to make space for a newly-appointed teacher and had been instructed to burn all the books stored in the room.

But spotting the name "Lennon" in the top of some of the pages he realised they related to the famous former student and tore the sheets from the book to retain as a keepsake.

John Lennon's detention sheet

The sheets show Lennon was punished for "silliness", "shouting" and "fighting"

A number of the pages he had taken out of the book and kept were destroyed at a later date in an accident involving chemicals.

Other sheets he gave away but these pages are some of the few that have survived.

The sheets have been authenticated by Lennon's close school friend, Pete Shotton, who wrote a book John Lennon: In My Life.

Peter Beech, who was Lennon's general science teacher at the time, said: "The sheet is typical of John Lennon, he was an extremely cheeky boy.

"He did, however, know his limits. In the classroom, if you settled John down, you generally settled the class down.

"His chemistry teacher Eric Oldman said that John could actually go far."

Lennon was shot dead aged 40 outside his New York apartment on 8 December 1980 by Mark Chapman.

Online bidding for the detention sheets and other items of Beatles memorabilia starts at tracksauction.com on 22 November.

find the article:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-merseyside-24894291