George Harrison’s childhood home to go under the hammer

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George Harrison’s Childhood Home To Go Under The Hammer
The Liverpool property saw early rehearsals from the fledgling Beatles
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By Alex Green, PA Senior Entertainment Reporter

George Harrison’s childhood home is to go up for auction this month, and could sell for as much as £200,000 (€233,000).

The three-bedroom property at Upton Green in the Liverpool suburb of Speke was the site of early Beatles rehearsals, and a number of photos show the band practising there.

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Although the space has been renovated, it still has some features from when Harrison lived there, including the original bath, sink, doors and outbuildings.

George Harrison outside his childhood home. Photo: Omega Auctions/PA

Harrison and his family moved into the property in 1950 when he was six years old, spending 12 years there before moving in 1962.

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During that time, the home was used as a rehearsal space for John Lennon and Paul McCartney’s skiffle group The Quarrymen, who later became the Beatles.

Harrison died of cancer in 2001, at the age of 58.

Omega Auctions has listed the property with an estimated sale price of between £160,000 and £200,000.

Auctioneer Paul Fairweather said: “It’s truly an honour to have a chance to sell a property which played an important role in the early career of the Beatles.

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“George will have learned to play the guitar in this house and the photos of the group gathering there in the early 1960s are amazing to see.

“We think it’s a steal at £160,000, especially with the Get Back film due out soon and the option coming up to apply for a blue plaque at the property. We can’t wait to see how it goes.”

George Harrison’s guitar auctioned
Paul McCartney with George Harrison during the Beatles’ early days. Photo: Gardiner Houlgate/PA

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The house will go under the hammer on November 30th and viewings are available by appointment in the two weeks before.

It comes ahead of the release of Get Back, a three-part documentary series directed by Oscar winner Peter Jackson that will tell the story of the band’s final recording sessions together.

The film is compiled from nearly 60 hours of unseen footage shot in January 1969, and more than 150 hours of unheard audio, most of which has been locked in a vault for more than half a century.

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