Monday, June 29, 2026

Up in the Air





 June 29, 1966 -- on their way to Tokyo

Flowers for Ringo


 June 29, 2011 -  Praug 

The Family Way




 June 29, 1996

The Girl Who Pesters Me (191)

Paul and Heather on the farm in June 1971 

 I am posting another story about the incident between Paul and Carolyn Mitchell.  And again, I am going to remind you all to be kind about what you say because Carolyn has been known to visit this site.   Reminder: This occurred 55 years ago—this didn't just happen.  Carolyn was a 24-year-old girl and was finding her way in the world.   She did a reckless and stupid thing by going to Paul's farm in Scotland.  She deserved to be treated poorly by Paul.  Whatever Paul said to her was justified.  

However, many fans at that time came to the UK from America and other countries to see the Beatles and ended up staying for an extended period.  No one would ever have told Lizzie Bravo she was a crazed stalker, and she did the same thing -- she came to the UK from Brazil and lived there for many years to see John Lennon.  As an adult, Carolyn has admitted that she was in the wrong.  She regretted all her actions.  And yet I know that many of you will say in the comments how she was a crazy stalker.  You will insult her and lump her in with John's murderer because she made a very bad decision 55 years ago.  

At the end of the day, Paul and his family were not hurt, Carolyn came to regret the entire ordeal, and it is part of the history of the time.   

I recommend anyone who wants to read about Carolyn's time in the UK as a Beatles fan to locate her book, All My Lovin' 


The Girl Who Pesters Me

By Alisdar Buchan

Daily Record

July 2, 1971


    Former Beatle Paul McCartney spoke bitterly yesterday of the girl fans who still make his life misery.

     In particular, he spoke of a 24-year-old American girl called Carolyn Mitchell. Carolyn is a tall blonde Mormon from Salt Lake City, Utah. She is also a Beatles fanatic who has shadowed the group's ex-members for two years, and she also happens to be accusing Paul McCartney of breaking her finger and making her nose bleed. 

    Carolyn claims that her former idol assaulted her as she sat on a hill overlooking his farm at Campbellton, Argyle.  But Paul, 29 denies the attack. He says that Carolyn left unharmed after he had told her bluntly to go at the farm yesterday. 

    He said, "For years now, I've been asking her politely, pleading with her to leave me and my family alone. She refuses to recognize that I am married with a family, and when I saw her sitting looking down on us, that was the end. This time, I told her to go away, and not politely.

     "I admit it, I was rude. You've got to understand, when you tell girls like her to push off, it's as though you had jilted them. Maybe she would have liked me to assault her. Obviously, when I told her to push off, something snapped.

     "The words I used were very rough, but there was no rough stuff. Whatever happened must have happened after she left here."

     When he spoke to me outside his farm high in the hills above Campbelltown, Paul denied that he did not want to speak to any of his fans.  He said, "I don't mind fans, but I object when they become fanatics, you know, the movie scene where you look out the window and see the spy in a trench coat under the lamppost? Then the next night, then the next night after, until you start to go psycho? Well, that's what it's been like for the past two years.

     "There are one or two girls like this. I have one who writes all the time from America, like she's my wife. She calls herself 'Paula McCartney'. She writes and says, 'I got the money', and 'Thanks for the new record', and 'I will be over when I can'.

     "Look, I don't mind talking to genuine fans. There were a couple of American girls here recently, and they were okay. We had a very nice, friendly talk together."

     The millionaire idol of millions explained how he had changed the direction of his pop career and his attitude toward young girl fans. "It's all right for Tom Jones doing that bit at the end of his act, where he goes and shakes hands and kisses the girls in the front row, but I have made it clear that that's not what I want to do.

     "I haven't been part of that for over three years. Even if I wanted to go around making love to other girls, which I don't, I couldn't. I am married with a family, and I'm very happy."

     Yesterday, Carolyn, who says she came to Scotland for a holiday, described her two years as the Beatles' number one fan. She said, "I know and have spoken to all the Beatles. At first, Paul was very friendly, but now he just won't speak to me.

     "I came over to England two years ago to be near the Beatles. I've seen them at Apple HQ and at their homes. I was never invited in, but spoke to them at the door," she said.

     She added, "Since Paul got married, he has changed completely. She (Paul's wife, Linda) has changed him. She's very possessive."

     Then Carolyn, who was writing a book on the Beatles from a fan's point of view, told of the walk which ended her liking for the Liverpool pop star. She said she had not gone to Campbelltown with the intention of speaking to Paul. She added, "I had gone up to the farm next to Paul's and sat on the hillside watching him farm from a distance. Paul came out of the house and drove up in his Land Rover. He jumped out and began shouting and swearing. I don't remember much about what happened, but my nose was bleeding, and my hand began to swell."

     A Campbelltown police spokesman confirmed that a complaint had been made and that a report would be sent to the prosecutor's office in due course,

Photographer


 June 29, 1971 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Stuck in Alaska







 August 28, 1966 -- Alaska.  The Beatles sure look bored when they were stuck in a hotel in Alaska on their way to Japan.  They were grounded due to a typhoon in Japan.   

Blackboard




 June 28, 1991 Liver

Mary's Birthday (1972)

Photographer unknown but photo taken on August 28, 1972 at Cavendish

 


No name article

Written by Kris Martell

With a Little Help From My Friends

December 1972


    The date was August 28, Mary's birthday, and also the day I was to leave London. Well, my flight was at 6pm or so. So, where was I? My last hours at Cavendish, of course, waiting up near the hospital at the corner. It was the bank holiday there, and most stores were closed. We were looking frantically for an open bakery, because we wanted to get Mary a cake. We found one that was open on High Street, bought the cake, and went back to Cavendish. It was still early, 10am to be exact. 

    We wanted to catch Rosie before she went in. We were going to ask her if she thought Paul might be upset over the cake, and if she said yes, we were going to give her the cake to take in. Apparently, she had the day off and never showed up.

     At noon, who did we see coming out on bikes, but Paul and Linda! We were taken a bit by surprise. I noticed that Paul's bike had a little back seat, probably for Mary. Anyhow, we decided not to follow, lest they'd get a bit mad if we did. So we just casually strolled on the opposite side of the street, walking in pairs or threes. When about eight minutes later, they took us by surprise and came around the corner. I was a few yards from turning the corner when I saw them. Oddly enough, Paul was sort of smiling. They were riding abreast, but when he saw us, he slowed down a bit and rode behind her, and they turned their heads completely around while riding to their house. I don't know if he rides zigzag or not, but he certainly was that day.  I assume it was because he was looking at us backward instead of keeping his eye on the road in front of him. What's more, he was whistling as he rode. By the way, the bikes were the crankiest bikes I ever heard, but I suppose on a Sunday morning on Cavendish, anything can be heard. 

    Well, after they were in, we rang the bell and spoke to Mrs. Meeken, their babysitter. We said we were leaving Mary's cake at the gate, and she said, "Thank you". When we saw the cake wasn't being taken in, we sent them a telegram that read, "Happy birthday, Mary, your cake is waiting alone outside the gate." Eventually, it was taken in. 

    Henry McCullough showed up with his wife and little boy, as did some other people and children. I remember walking by the gate. Some people had just arrived, and Paul greeted them at the door, as did all the kids in the house. Mary was having a birthday party. The dishes couldn't have been clanked louder. I had to leave at 2:30pm in order to pick up my luggage at my friend's house and make it to the airport in time for my flight home, but my friend Karen wrote and said they came out a half hour after I left, then they went off to Piccadilly to see a cartoon movie,

A Long Day for Yoko and John in Court (1971)



Just a Long Day For Yoko and John in Custody War
By Richard Meserole and Lester Abelman
New Long Island
June 29, 1971

     Beatle John Lennon, and his Japanese wife, Yoko Ono, made a fruitless trip to Mineola, Long Island, yesterday in her battle for custody of her daughter, Kyoko, 7, the offspring of her first marriage to movie producer Anthony Cox.

     She lost another round in the fight. Yoko had obtained a show-cause order in the Nassau Supreme Court in an effort to have the child produced in court. She had believed the girl was living with Cox in Bellport, Long Island. Last Friday, her attorney, Sydney Siben, subpoenaed Cox's father, George of 24 Yaphank Road, Brookhaven, a technical art director for Brookhaven National Laboratories. 

    The elder Cox showed up in court yesterday and testified that he had seen neither Kyoko nor her father since last August, when they left the state. He said that so far as he knew, they had never returned to the state. He told the court that he knew where Kyoko was, but that the location was not in this state. He refused to say where she was.

        Justice Albert Oppido dismissed the suit after ruling that no facts had been shown to show that the court had jurisdiction in the case. Simon told the court that Cox had been using Kyoko as a pawn to extort money from Lennon.

     Lennon and Yoko were both in court, but neither would talk to newsmen or to several dozen Beatles fans who hovered around the shiny gray limousine that brought the Lennons to Mineola.

     Yoko was dressed in a white mini skirt, green sleeveless sweater, and white boots. Lennon was unusually conservative in a thick, black vested suit, a maroon and white check shirt, and a reddish tie. For him, his hair was not particularly long. He was unbearded. 

    The Lennons have traveled to many parts of the world in their fight for Kyoko. Last April, they were charged with kidnapping the girl in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. At the time, Yoko said that her temporary removal of Kyoko from the grounds of a hotel was purely an act of a mother seeking to see her child. She said she had no intention of trying to kidnap the girl, but only "wanted to go shopping." When the Lennons arrived here early this month from London, he told Newsmen that the custody fight had already cost him $120,000