Paul McCartney’s 21st birthday party on June 18, 1963, at his Aunt Jin’s house became infamous for a violent alteration where John Lennon severely beat Cavern Club DJ Bob Wooler. While the milestone event at 147 Dinas Lane in Huyton, Liverpool started as a joyous celebration with Merseybeat royalty, it is remembered as one of the darkest days in early Beatles history.
Held inside and under a marquee tent set up in the back garden of Paul's Aunt Jin (also known as Auntie Gin or Ginny). Local group The Fourmost performed at Paul’s request and famously refused to accept any payment for the gig. Paul's brother Mike also had his comedy group, Scaffold, perform a set. Attendees included all members of The Beatles, Paul’s new girlfriend Jane Asher, Billy J. Kramer, and members of The Shadows (Hank Marvin, Bruce Welch, and Brian Bennett).
Late in the evening, the party took a chaotic turn fueled by heavy drinking. Legendary Cavern Club emcee Bob Wooler began repeatedly teasing John Lennon about his recent vacation to Spain with the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, jokingly referring to it as a “honeymoon.” Heavily intoxicated and enraged by the insinuations, 22-year-old Lennon snapped. He viciously attacked Wooler with his fists and a stick, leaving the DJ hospitalized with bruised ribs and a black eye.
Lennon had to be physically dragged off Wooler. He later stated in The Beatles Anthology that seeing himself nearly kill Wooler was the shocking turning point that made him swear off personal violence forever.
“Bob Wooler had been insinuating that me and Brian had had an affair in Spain. And I must have been frightened of the fag in me to get so angry. I was out of my mind with drink – you know, when you get down to the point where you want to drink out of all the empty glasses; that drunk.“And Bob was saying, ‘Come on, John, tell me about you and Brian – we all know.’ You know when you’re twenty-one, you want to be a man – if somebody had said it now I wouldn’t give a sh*t, but I was beating the sh*t out of him, hitting him with a big stick, and for the first time I thought, ‘I can kill this guy.’“I just saw it, like on a screen: if I hit him once more, that’s going to be it. I really got shocked. That’s when I gave up violence, because all my life I’d been like that.”
Terrified that the assault would ruin the band's rapidly rising career, immediate damage control took place. Brian Epstein took Wooler to the hospital while Cynthia Lennon hurried John away from the party. To avoid a high-profile, catastrophic lawsuit in the national press, John sent a telegram of apology and paid Wooler an out-of-court settlement of £200 to drop the matter.





































