John Lennon was a bully and nuisance as a schoolboy, a current teacher at the singer’s old school has claimed.
The Beatles star was said to have been such a troublesome student that the staff at Quarry Bank School in Liverpool were reluctant to recognise him as a former pupil after he found fame with the Beatles.
Tom Barry, a design and technology teacher at what is now The Calderstones School, said: “When John left, he was that much of a nuisance and a bully and that much of a poor student the school staff didn’t want to acknowledge that he ever went to the school and removed any trace of him.
“He was never spoken about, he was never acknowledged through Beatlemania. Apparently, fans would come to the school gates and just be sent away because the school didn’t want any connection to him.”
The teacher added: “They didn’t want to idolise him and for students to think you can prat about and be a bit of a bully and still be successful.”
Lennon attended the school from 1952 to 1957 and formed the Quarrymen, the forerunners of the Beatles, while a pupil there.
His record and antics in school have been well-documented, including detention sheets that revealed his “extremely cheeky” side when they came up for auction in 2013.
Reasons for punishment given by his teachers on the recovered sheets, from Quarry Bank School when Lennon was 15, include ‘‘sabotage’’, ‘‘fighting in class’’, ‘‘nuisance’’, ‘‘shoving’’ and ‘‘just no interest whatsoever’’.
The Beatle even managed to receive three detentions in one day on two occasions in 1955 and 1956.
Lennon’s old desk was discovered hidden away in the attic of the school, where teachers were said to have stored it so they would not have to remember his time there.
Source: India McTaggart/telegraph.co.uk
The desk, which is an old-fashioned lift-up, will now feature in a display at the Liverpool Beatles Museum along with other items from the band members’ schooldays, including Lennon’s enrolment ledger signed by his aunt.
Despite years of refusing to acknowledge the school’s link to pop history through Lennon’s rise to stardom, the school is now starting to offer tours of its site for Beatles fans.