I’ve traced significant Lennon/Beatle related locations over the years, I’ve shared some of them here.

Brian Of Nazareth

Well-known member
So over the years (and much to my wife’s patience) I’ve traced many famous Lennon linked places as well as Beatles stuff.

I’m watching the video suggested by @Good Dog Nigel in another thread (San Francisco one) and it’s given me the urge to do something.

I’m not sure how best to share all the images/stories? One includes being invited into The Dakota 😊! Any suggestions?
 
So over the years (and much to my wife’s patience) I’ve traced many famous Lennon linked places as well as Beatles stuff.

I’m watching the video suggested by @Good Dog Nigel in another thread (San Francisco one) and it’s given me the urge to do something.

I’m not sure how best to share all the images/stories? One includes being invited into The Dakota 😊! Any suggestions?
A book one day may be fun, Brian 😊
 
Would love to read/watch/listen to these stories - in any way you're comfortable! It would be great to see them on this thread, or perhaps you could start a blog for longer-form writings on the experiences and share those here (we have many fantastic bloggers on the thread!).

I think ultimately it comes down to how you want to share your work, but you'll certainly have an audience here whatever you do!
 
A Visit to the Dakota

Someone asked me a while ago about the time I went inside the Dakota building in NYC. Here’s the longer version of the story… blame @Good Dog Nigel for encouraging me! 😂

I made my first visit to New York City from the UK in December 2000, a trip to mark my 20th birthday. To say it was special would be an understatement. For years, I had lived and breathed The Beatles, and more specifically, John Lennon. Every book, every magazine clipping, every grainy VHS documentary I could get my hands on as a teenager – I devoured it. So when I finally crossed the Atlantic, there were certain places that were non-negotiable. The Dakota was at the very top of that list.

Now, my poor girlfriend (who, against all odds, is now my wife!) bore the brunt of my obsession. We went to the Dakota not once, not twice, but on most of the days of our trip. While most tourists were taking in Times Square, the Empire State, or Macy’s Christmas windows, there I was, loitering outside this gothic fortress on 72nd Street, soaking in its atmosphere like it was a holy site.

On those visits I began chatting to one of the doormen, Luis. He was one of those instantly likeable people – warm, approachable, not at all put out by this young British lad turning up again and again. We spoke about Lennon, about the building, even a little about the city. To my astonishment, he told me that if I left a CD with him, he would ask Yoko to sign it. I thought he was just being polite, but he meant it.

On the last day of our trip, we saved the Dakota for last. The December light was already fading and we had to make our way back to family outside of Manhattan. Trouble was, no yellow cab wanted to take us that far. I asked Luis what my options were, and he explained I’d need to call a local car service from the area we were staying in. My best bet was the nearest payphone, which happened to be in the subway entrance across the street.

So off I went, rehearsing how I was going to explain myself on the phone. Only when I picked it up – nothing. Dead. I tried again, banged the receiver, but no luck. Heart sinking, I walked back across to the Dakota to explain my problem. That’s when Luis looked at me, paused, and simply said, “Well, you can come in and use the phone in the office.”

I couldn’t believe it. My stomach flipped and my heart hammered in my chest. He beckoned me in under the famous archway. The same archway I had seen in countless books and documentaries. The same archway that would forever be connected with tragedy. I followed him up the narrow driveway to the door on the right, the one marked Reception.

And then I found myself climbing those steps. Those steps. The steps John had walked so many times. Suddenly, all the teenage years of obsessing, of poring over details, of wishing I could somehow go back in time – it all came crashing down on me at once. It felt like a thunderbolt. My stomach sank. The sadness hit me with a force I wasn’t prepared for.

Inside, the reception was small but functional. On the wall were multiple CCTV monitors showing the hallways and doorways of apartments inside the building – the private, unseen world of the Dakota. I stood there with my disposable camera in my hand. This was before smartphones, of course, so that little cardboard box was my only way of capturing the trip. But the last thing I felt like doing in that moment was taking photographs. It felt wrong, almost intrusive. So I just held it quietly, trying to process where I was.

The call was made, arrangements sorted, and I thanked Luis profusely before stepping back outside. I can still remember the cold air hitting me as I waited for the taxi, signed CD tucked safely away in my bag. When I got home to the UK, I opened it – “To Paul NYC 2000 love Yoko Ono.” I don’t think I stopped smiling for weeks.

And yet, the story didn’t quite end there.

Weeks later, I finally took that disposable camera to be developed. When I opened the packet and flicked through the photos, I froze. Among the blurry shots of Manhattan streets and holiday moments was one I hadn’t taken myself – a photo that had somehow gone off as I was leaving. It showed me walking back through the Dakota’s archway, out to the street – a view John would have had thousands of times.

It was eerie. Chilling, even. Random, strange, and deeply moving.

I never forgot the kindness of Luis. True to my word, I sent him a gift from the UK when I returned home, though it never felt enough to repay what he had given me – a once-in-a-lifetime moment. I’ve often wondered since how he is, or what he went on to do. He probably never realised the depth of the gift he gave me that night, but I’ll always be grateful.

So, sorry if this isn’t the “short version” of the story. But some experiences are too extraordinary to be cut down. And for me, that December evening in the Dakota wasn’t just a brush with history. It was a moment where all those teenage dreams, all that sadness, and all that wonder converged in the most unexpected way. I’ve tried to write this with @Sean in mind and avoid “that” part of the history and hope I have done that.

I’ve been back to the Dakota many times. Every time the history of it all never leaves me and each time is special. Now I get to visit it with my son, Lennon. Despite years of wishful thinking, I’ve never actually made it back inside. Though I have always had reoccurring dreams of walking the famous hallways. That’ll have to do for now.
 

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A Pilgrimage to Tittenhurst Park

One ordinary drive back from Heathrow turned into a Lennon pilgrimage I’ll never forget. I made a detour—not to a service station for crisps and a Coke—but to Ascot, to see Tittenhurst Park, the home where John and Yoko once lived, and where Imagine the song and album were born.

Tittenhurst wasn’t just any country house; it was a creative sanctuary. John and Yoko had moved there in 1969, and it’s where he shot those iconic Imagine film sequences and recorded in the studio on the grounds. After they left, Ringo Starr owned the property for a number of years. By the time I made my visit, it had been sold on again and was in the hands of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the President of the United Arab Emirates. In other words, it was very much in “royalty” hands.

When I pulled up outside, I barely had time to take in the gates before I was suddenly surrounded by security. Not surprising, really — this wasn’t exactly your average English country home anymore. For a moment, I thought I was about to be told in no uncertain terms to get back in my car and leave. But after a few nervous explanations — that I was a lifelong Lennon fan, that I’d made this little detour just to stand at the gates of the place where Imagine was created — their stance softened.

As I stood there, looking through the gates at the long drive beyond, a strange thing happened. In my mind’s eye, I could see John and Yoko in that famous opening to the Imagine video: the two of them walking up the driveway together on a cloudy grey English day, heading into the house. That scene has always had such a haunting, dreamlike quality — and now, standing there decades later in the same cold English light, it felt almost like I’d stepped into the film itself.

Then came a moment I never expected. One of the security guards, who by this point had relaxed completely, actually offered to take a photo of me and my son, Lennon, standing outside the home. It felt surreal — the two of us, bearing John’s name, captured outside the very place where he had created one of the most enduring songs of all time. For me, it was more than a picture. It was a memory stitched into the fabric of my Lennon journey.

I didn’t walk the gardens or touch the piano, but standing there, gazing past those gates, was powerful in its own right. It was a place I had only ever seen in books, photos, and films — and now I was there in person, breathing the same Berkshire air. For a moment, Imagine wasn’t just an album on my shelf; it was a real, physical space, just out of reach but close enough to feel.

As I drove away, I thought about how many fans had probably made the same pilgrimage, and how that house had passed from one Beatle to another before finding its way into very different hands.
 

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A Visit to the Dakota

Someone asked me a while ago about the time I went inside the Dakota building in NYC. Here’s the longer version of the story… blame @Good Dog Nigel for encouraging me! 😂

I made my first visit to New York City from the UK in December 2000, a trip to mark my 20th birthday. To say it was special would be an understatement. For years, I had lived and breathed The Beatles, and more specifically, John Lennon. Every book, every magazine clipping, every grainy VHS documentary I could get my hands on as a teenager – I devoured it. So when I finally crossed the Atlantic, there were certain places that were non-negotiable. The Dakota was at the very top of that list.

Now, my poor girlfriend (who, against all odds, is now my wife!) bore the brunt of my obsession. We went to the Dakota not once, not twice, but on most of the days of our trip. While most tourists were taking in Times Square, the Empire State, or Macy’s Christmas windows, there I was, loitering outside this gothic fortress on 72nd Street, soaking in its atmosphere like it was a holy site.

On those visits I began chatting to one of the doormen, Luis. He was one of those instantly likeable people – warm, approachable, not at all put out by this young British lad turning up again and again. We spoke about Lennon, about the building, even a little about the city. To my astonishment, he told me that if I left a CD with him, he would ask Yoko to sign it. I thought he was just being polite, but he meant it.

On the last day of our trip, we saved the Dakota for last. The December light was already fading and we had to make our way back to family outside of Manhattan. Trouble was, no yellow cab wanted to take us that far. I asked Luis what my options were, and he explained I’d need to call a local car service from the area we were staying in. My best bet was the nearest payphone, which happened to be in the subway entrance across the street.

So off I went, rehearsing how I was going to explain myself on the phone. Only when I picked it up – nothing. Dead. I tried again, banged the receiver, but no luck. Heart sinking, I walked back across to the Dakota to explain my problem. That’s when Luis looked at me, paused, and simply said, “Well, you can come in and use the phone in the office.”

I couldn’t believe it. My stomach flipped and my heart hammered in my chest. He beckoned me in under the famous archway. The same archway I had seen in countless books and documentaries. The same archway that would forever be connected with tragedy. I followed him up the narrow driveway to the door on the right, the one marked Reception.

And then I found myself climbing those steps. Those steps. The steps John had walked so many times. Suddenly, all the teenage years of obsessing, of poring over details, of wishing I could somehow go back in time – it all came crashing down on me at once. It felt like a thunderbolt. My stomach sank. The sadness hit me with a force I wasn’t prepared for.

Inside, the reception was small but functional. On the wall were multiple CCTV monitors showing the hallways and doorways of apartments inside the building – the private, unseen world of the Dakota. I stood there with my disposable camera in my hand. This was before smartphones, of course, so that little cardboard box was my only way of capturing the trip. But the last thing I felt like doing in that moment was taking photographs. It felt wrong, almost intrusive. So I just held it quietly, trying to process where I was.

The call was made, arrangements sorted, and I thanked Luis profusely before stepping back outside. I can still remember the cold air hitting me as I waited for the taxi, signed CD tucked safely away in my bag. When I got home to the UK, I opened it – “To Paul NYC 2000 love Yoko Ono.” I don’t think I stopped smiling for weeks.

And yet, the story didn’t quite end there.

Weeks later, I finally took that disposable camera to be developed. When I opened the packet and flicked through the photos, I froze. Among the blurry shots of Manhattan streets and holiday moments was one I hadn’t taken myself – a photo that had somehow gone off as I was leaving. It showed me walking back through the Dakota’s archway, out to the street – a view John would have had thousands of times.

It was eerie. Chilling, even. Random, strange, and deeply moving.

I never forgot the kindness of Luis. True to my word, I sent him a gift from the UK when I returned home, though it never felt enough to repay what he had given me – a once-in-a-lifetime moment. I’ve often wondered since how he is, or what he went on to do. He probably never realised the depth of the gift he gave me that night, but I’ll always be grateful.

So, sorry if this isn’t the “short version” of the story. But some experiences are too extraordinary to be cut down. And for me, that December evening in the Dakota wasn’t just a brush with history. It was a moment where all those teenage dreams, all that sadness, and all that wonder converged in the most unexpected way. I’ve tried to write this with @Sean in mind and avoid “that” part of the history and hope I have done that.

I’ve been back to the Dakota many times. Every time the history of it all never leaves me and each time is special. Now I get to visit it with my son, Lennon. Despite years of wishful thinking, I’ve never actually made it back inside. Though I have always had reoccurring dreams of walking the famous hallways. That’ll have to do for now.
Fantastic story! You’re a natural writer, really talented at putting the reader in the moment. I’d love to read more of your tales and I’m glad you’ve cherished that Yoko signature (I love Life with the Lions, always happy to see it pop up!) ❤️
 
A Visit to the Dakota

Someone asked me a while ago about the time I went inside the Dakota building in NYC. Here’s the longer version of the story… blame @Good Dog Nigel for encouraging me! 😂

I made my first visit to New York City from the UK in December 2000, a trip to mark my 20th birthday. To say it was special would be an understatement. For years, I had lived and breathed The Beatles, and more specifically, John Lennon. Every book, every magazine clipping, every grainy VHS documentary I could get my hands on as a teenager – I devoured it. So when I finally crossed the Atlantic, there were certain places that were non-negotiable. The Dakota was at the very top of that list.

Now, my poor girlfriend (who, against all odds, is now my wife!) bore the brunt of my obsession. We went to the Dakota not once, not twice, but on most of the days of our trip. While most tourists were taking in Times Square, the Empire State, or Macy’s Christmas windows, there I was, loitering outside this gothic fortress on 72nd Street, soaking in its atmosphere like it was a holy site.

On those visits I began chatting to one of the doormen, Luis. He was one of those instantly likeable people – warm, approachable, not at all put out by this young British lad turning up again and again. We spoke about Lennon, about the building, even a little about the city. To my astonishment, he told me that if I left a CD with him, he would ask Yoko to sign it. I thought he was just being polite, but he meant it.

On the last day of our trip, we saved the Dakota for last. The December light was already fading and we had to make our way back to family outside of Manhattan. Trouble was, no yellow cab wanted to take us that far. I asked Luis what my options were, and he explained I’d need to call a local car service from the area we were staying in. My best bet was the nearest payphone, which happened to be in the subway entrance across the street.

So off I went, rehearsing how I was going to explain myself on the phone. Only when I picked it up – nothing. Dead. I tried again, banged the receiver, but no luck. Heart sinking, I walked back across to the Dakota to explain my problem. That’s when Luis looked at me, paused, and simply said, “Well, you can come in and use the phone in the office.”

I couldn’t believe it. My stomach flipped and my heart hammered in my chest. He beckoned me in under the famous archway. The same archway I had seen in countless books and documentaries. The same archway that would forever be connected with tragedy. I followed him up the narrow driveway to the door on the right, the one marked Reception.

And then I found myself climbing those steps. Those steps. The steps John had walked so many times. Suddenly, all the teenage years of obsessing, of poring over details, of wishing I could somehow go back in time – it all came crashing down on me at once. It felt like a thunderbolt. My stomach sank. The sadness hit me with a force I wasn’t prepared for.

Inside, the reception was small but functional. On the wall were multiple CCTV monitors showing the hallways and doorways of apartments inside the building – the private, unseen world of the Dakota. I stood there with my disposable camera in my hand. This was before smartphones, of course, so that little cardboard box was my only way of capturing the trip. But the last thing I felt like doing in that moment was taking photographs. It felt wrong, almost intrusive. So I just held it quietly, trying to process where I was.

The call was made, arrangements sorted, and I thanked Luis profusely before stepping back outside. I can still remember the cold air hitting me as I waited for the taxi, signed CD tucked safely away in my bag. When I got home to the UK, I opened it – “To Paul NYC 2000 love Yoko Ono.” I don’t think I stopped smiling for weeks.

And yet, the story didn’t quite end there.

Weeks later, I finally took that disposable camera to be developed. When I opened the packet and flicked through the photos, I froze. Among the blurry shots of Manhattan streets and holiday moments was one I hadn’t taken myself – a photo that had somehow gone off as I was leaving. It showed me walking back through the Dakota’s archway, out to the street – a view John would have had thousands of times.

It was eerie. Chilling, even. Random, strange, and deeply moving.

I never forgot the kindness of Luis. True to my word, I sent him a gift from the UK when I returned home, though it never felt enough to repay what he had given me – a once-in-a-lifetime moment. I’ve often wondered since how he is, or what he went on to do. He probably never realised the depth of the gift he gave me that night, but I’ll always be grateful.

So, sorry if this isn’t the “short version” of the story. But some experiences are too extraordinary to be cut down. And for me, that December evening in the Dakota wasn’t just a brush with history. It was a moment where all those teenage dreams, all that sadness, and all that wonder converged in the most unexpected way. I’ve tried to write this with @Sean in mind and avoid “that” part of the history and hope I have done that.

I’ve been back to the Dakota many times. Every time the history of it all never leaves me and each time is special. Now I get to visit it with my son, Lennon. Despite years of wishful thinking, I’ve never actually made it back inside. Though I have always had reoccurring dreams of walking the famous hallways. That’ll have to do for now.
Oh this is INCREDIBLE!! I’ve passed the entrance who knows how many times, but I could never imagine having an experience like this. Thank you for sharing 🥹
 
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