
According to the Strawberry Field official website, “each visitor will enter into a world where ‘nothing is real’ plunging into the 1860’s era where Strawberry Field began as a Victorian house, before it transformed into a safe place where The Salvation Army supported and homed some of Liverpool’s vulnerable youth. Visitors can then experience through archival footage, photographs and timelines and our specialist media guides the world where John Lennon played as a child and what happened behind the famous red gates.”
Strawberry field was a children’s home from 1936 to 2005, when it officially closed its doors. Between those years, John Lennon, one of the four of history’s most famous Liverpudlians, frequented the site during his childhood to play with the kids staying at the site’s house. His sister remembers Lennon clambering over the wall to this “special place” as a child, while Lennon’s Aunt Mimi, who helped raise him, remembered “John would jump up and down shouting ‘Mimi, come on. We’re going to be late.'”
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