The second major phase in The Beatles’ story was about to begin. On 16 August 1960 they embarked on the journey from Liverpool to Hamburg, Germany.
The five members of The Beatles – John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Stuart Sutcliffe and Pete Best – along with manager Allan Williams, his wife Beryl, her brother Barry Chang and friend Lord Woodbine, set off from the Jacaranda club in Williams’ green Austin van.
They stopped off in London to pick up a 10th passenger, Herr Steiner, an Austrian working in the Heaven and Hell coffee shop on Old Compton Street, who was to be the Hamburg promoter Bruno Koschmider’s interpreter. They then caught the ferry from Harwich to the Netherlands.
Anthology
The party ended up in Arnhem after Williams took a wrong turning. While there they were photographed at the war memorial, spent time wandering around the city, and John Lennon stole a harmonica from a local shop.
It quietened us down a bit. I think it was the aura of the place, the peace and tranquility that came through to us.
We didn’t stay together as a party so while Allan went off to do what he wanted to do, we broke up and did our own thing and had a walkabout.
It quietened us down a bit. I think it was the aura of the place, the peace and tranquility that came through to us.
We didn’t stay together as a party so while Allan went off to do what he wanted to do, we broke up and did our own thing and had a walkabout.
From the Netherlands the party made its way to Hamburg, arriving in the early evening of 17 August 1960.
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