Luke Macgregor / Reuters
Ringo Starr and wife Barbara Bach.
By Rolling Stone
Ringo Starr's birthplace in Liverpool has been saved from the threat of demolition, the Telegraph reports. The house, a run-down three-bedroom Victorian terrace, was one of 400 buildings marked for demolition in the Dingle area of Liverpool, but Beatles fans and city residents have successfully lobbied to save the house, along with 15 others in the area. The Liverpool City Council has agreed to give locals the opportunity to fix up the properties.
Ringo Starr: I lost my Beatles photographs
The Liverpool City Council initially resisted efforts to preserve the house because Starr only lived at the location with his family for three months as an infant.
Exclusive Q&A: Ringo Starr on his upcoming tour and the elusive "Let It Be" DVD
The National Trust of England decreed that the house did not merit saving because of his brief stay there at a very early age, and that they simply did not have the means to acquire more than a dozen houses where the Beatles lived as children.
Do you think Ringo's house should have been saved??Let us know on Facebook and follow us on Pinterest!
Related content:
naacp glen campbell jerusalem artichoke bud shootout aretha franklin stevie wonder new orleans weather
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.