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Iris Violet Caldwell

Iris Violet Caldwell

Female 1945 -    Has 2 ancestors and 2 descendants in this family tree.

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  • Name Iris Violet Caldwell 
    Birth 1945 
    Gender Female 
    Siblings 1 Sibling 
    Person ID I513544  Geneagraphie
    Last Modified 7 Oct 2013 

    Father Ernie Caldwell   d. 27 Sep 1972 
    Mother Violet   d. 28 Sep 1972 
    Family ID F209491  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 George Harrison,   b. 24 Feb 1943   d. 29 Nov 2001 (Age 58 years) 
    Family ID F209492  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2007 

    Family 2 James Paul McCartney,   b. 18 Jun 1942, Liverpool, Lancaster, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F209490  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2007 

    Family 3 Alvin Stardust,   b. 27 Sep 1942, Muswell Hill, London Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Yes, date unknown 
    Marriage 1964 
    Divorce Yes, date unknown 
    Children 
     1. Sean Jewry   d. Yes, date unknown
     2. Adam Jewry,   b. 14 Feb 1971, Liverpool, Lancaster, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Yes, date unknown
    Family ID F209493  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 12 Apr 2007 

  • Photos
    513544.jpg
    513544.jpg

  • Notes 
    • As George Harrison recalls "Ernie was a porter in his spare time in the local hospital, Broad Green Hospital. He used to sing songs to his patients. He was a really nice fella, and a window cleaner by occupation. After we'd arrived late at night, he'd go to bed and they'd all make jokes about him, but in a nice way. He was a simple, quiet, mild-mannered bloke."
      Her brother, Alan, was a talented singer who gave up his job as a cotton salesman to start a group called the Texans. He later adopted the vibrant stage name Rory Storm to better suit his wild stage antics, and the band - who were the top Liverpool group of that era - became known as the Hurricanes, acquired a new drummer called Ringo Starr, and hang out with other up-and-coming groups such as The Beatles. Alan was so dedicated to his new image that he adopted his stage name legally by deed poll and named his home at 54 Broadgreen Road, Stormsville. The group released one single in December 1964 which failed to chart and Rory refused to take up further chances to record. Iris felt that "He was happy to be the King of Liverpool; he was never keen on touring, he didn't want to give up running for the Pembroke Harriers ... and he'd never miss a Liverpool football match!" Her first boyfriend remembers of her brother "Rory was an athlete. I remember a couple of times I came to have a date with Iris, and Rory would come running up to his front door sweating and panting, and checking his stopwatch, because he'd been training."
      Iris found her first boyfriend when she was twelve, in a fourteen year old lad called George Harrison. Her mother Vi recalled "George used to come and watch TV three times a week. He and Iris used to sit there holding hands. It was the first time either of them had ever taken any interest in someone of the opposite sex. At Iris' fourteenth birthday party, I remember George turned up in a brand new Italian-style suit covered with buttons. As in most teenage parties, they kept on playing kissing games and somehow or other, George and Iris always ended up together."
      George definitely saw her as his first girlfriend, but was unsure how she saw the relationship. "My first girlfriend was Rory Storm's sister, Iris Caldwell. She was really nice and had cotton wool in her bra. She probably didn't ever think she was my girlfriend. You never know when you're young; you just fancy somebody, or someone's in the same room as you, and you end up thinking they're your girlfriend. ...I'd met Iris a couple of times and went round to her house and hung out. They had a little basement that they were trying to turn into a coffee club. That seemed to be the craze in the Fifties."
      George's sister Louise remembered that Iris and George were inseparable until he got into music, and then his interest in her was overtaken by his new love. He even auditioned for her brother's group, The Hurricanes, but wasn't asked to join. Despite failing to join Rory's band and no longer going out with Iris, all of the family were still very friendly with George. "They were a great family and were very friendly to all of us. Later - after we'd come back from Hamburg and done loads of gigs in Liverpool and the North of England - we used Rory's house as a place to hang out when we got back to town after shows. His mother Vi would make endless pots of tea and toast for us all."
      Iris trained as a dancer and got a job performing at the Tower Ballroom in Liverpool. There in December 1961, at the age of seventeen, she met another young man named Paul McCartney who was performing on the bill with The Beatles. He couldn't keep his eyes off her as she danced The Twist, and he was so impressed by her fishnet stockinged legs and the fact that she was already working professionally in showbusiness that soon after the meeting they began dating. "Paul and I dated for a couple of years," recalled Iris, "It was never that serious. We never pretended to be true to each other. I went out with lots of people. I was working away in different theatres at the time but if I was back home then we would go out. There were never any promises made or love declared."
      The couple were together for twelve months, and after six months they were considered serious enough to be "going steady". The Beatles were still using The Caldwell's family home at 54 Broad Green Road as their late-night hang-out as Paul remembered fondly. "We used to go back to Vi Caldwell's. I went out for a short time with Rory's sister Iris, a dancer. Their house was the only one open at that time of night. Vi was a night owl. It was our late-night hang-out, really, just cups of tea and card games and chatting. I remember playing a Ouija board with Cilla and her friend Pat."
      The relationship started to get difficult when The Beatles' new manager started issuing rules about girlfriends. "Epstein was not very pleased that I was going out with Paul and I wasn't allowed to go anywhere with the group in case any of their fans saw me. But every night after they'd appeared at The Cavern, Paul would come round to our house - and when they went away to Hamburg he used to write me the most fantastic letters." The secrecy surrounding The Beatles and their girlfriends was now so intense that he signed these letters "Paul McCoombie" so that no-one who saw them would guess they were from him.
      It is said that The Beatles song I Saw Her Standing There was written about Iris but although the song began it's creation around the time the couple had begun dating, Paul says that he began writing about a seventeen year old girl dancing in order to have something that the groups's female audience could relate to. Iris does think that Paul intended the song eventually for her brother Rory to record. "He thought it would be a good song for him but it wasn't dealt out that way. Brian Epstein didn't want Rory to have it."
      "Paul was very hard to dislike. Even in his teens there was something about him, a sort of charisma that used to strike people when they met him for the first time. And he always knew exactly where he was going, even though people often used to tell him they (The Beatles) would never make it"
      Iris used to encourage Paul to go out with other girls, while she stayed faithful to him. Despite never seeing him with anyone else she was sure there were others. "I'm quite sure there were many girls around at that time ... and then when he came back from London once and he said that he had met Jane Asher I didn't want to go out with him anymore, though we remained good friends and kept a good relationship."
      When Paul and Jane first met at the Royal Albert Hall, Shane Fenton who was appearing with his group The Fentones offered to drive The Beatles and Miss Asher over to his friend Brian Hutchins' flat in Chelsea. They all set off, and while there, Jane and Paul talked and ended up realising there was something between them. The Fentones were due to play a gig at Liverpool's Tower Ballroom, and while there, Shane met Iris and they began going out. They married in 1964 (Iris becoming Mrs. Bernard William Jewry, Shane's real name) and she ended up touring with him as a double act. They also sang together as session singers during a recording session in 1964. Brian Epstein had decided to record her brother Rory's group The Hurricanes and arranged a recording session in London at IBC Studios. The session lasted for 15 hours while they recorded a single of West Side Story's "America", a b-side of The Everly brothers' "Since You Broke My Heart" and a few other songs including "Ubangi Stomp" and "I'll Be There". The groups' former drummer Ringo Starr also attended the session.
      The couple had two children together called Sean and Adam and moved to Oakhill Park where they were often visited by her family. Sheila Connor who used to babysit Sean and Adam for Iris remembers the family fondly: "In the early Seventies my sisters and myself used to baby-sit for Iris Fenton, Rory's sister, who was then married to Shane Fenton. We looked after Rory's nephews Sean and Adam. Iris and Shane lived in Oakhill Park and we attended St. Agnes' School, which was in Oakhill Park. Rory and Ma Storm, his mother, then lived in Broadgreen Road. They were more often than not round at Iris's. Their house on Broadgreen Road was called Hurricanesville [Stormsville] and was directly opposite Winnie Mac's tap dancing school. Iris sometimes helped out there with the classes. Rory's dad Ernie used to visit St. Vincent's Hospice on Broadgreen Road. This was a geriatric home for old ladies. He used to bring them books, magazines, sweets etc. He did this a lot in his spare time. I don't recall ever having a sad time when we were at Iris's as there was always something to do. Rory didn't have long conversations as he had a slight stutter, and tended to sing. I remember one night my sister and myself were sitting watching TV and in came Rory singing 'would you like a cup of tea?' We continued to babysit and help out at Iris' until Rory and Ma Storm's tragic death." In 1972 when her brother Rory was working as a disc jockey in Amsterdam, brother and sister were called back home after news that their father died. The whole family became deeply distressed but more troubles were round the corner. While Rory was at Stormsville comforting his mother Vi, he overdosed on a mixture of sleeping pills and alcohol. he died on 28th September 1972, and his mother committed suicide upon finding him. Iris' husband was convinced Rory's death was not intentional. "Rory became very ill. He had a chest condition which meant he couldn't breathe properly. He found it difficult to sleep. so he'd take his pills with a drop of Scotch which doped him completely. At the post-mortem it was established that he hadn't taken enough pills to kill himself ... It had been nothing more than a case of trying to get some kip, but because he was so weak, his body couldn't handle it. He died in the night and his mother found him. She must have felt that she'd lost everything. I think she took an overdose, but I'm convinced that Rory didn't. When you've known somebody long enough, you know whether they're going to do it or not. The whole thing was an accident."
      Iris's husband changed his name to Alvin Stardust during the 1970s glam-rock period and finally achieved his real fame, but they divorced shortly after that. She remarried in 1983, and has since stepped out of the music scene.
      SOURCES: 1960s and 1970s interviews, various Beatles and McCartney biographies and the invaluable Merseybeat <http://www.triumphpc.com/mersey-beat/> website.



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