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The New Adelphi Club

1984 establishments in EnglandBuildings and structures in Kingston upon HullCulture in Kingston upon HullIncomplete lists from February 2016Music in Kingston upon Hull
Music venues completed in 1984Music venues in the East Riding of YorkshireTourist attractions in Kingston upon HullUse British English from September 2019
New Adelph Club, Hull
New Adelph Club, Hull

The New Adelphi Club is a popular local venue for alternative live music in the city of Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It has achieved notability outside its local area, having hosted such bands as The Stone Roses, Radiohead, Green Day and Oasis, in its over-30 year history. The club opened in October 1984, and Kaiser Chiefs performed there as part of the 30th anniversary celebrations in 2014.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The New Adelphi Club (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The New Adelphi Club
De Grey Street, Hull Sculcoates

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N 53.762222222222 ° E -0.35527777777778 °
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The New Adelphi Club

De Grey Street
HU5 2RU Hull, Sculcoates
England, United Kingdom
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New Adelph Club, Hull
New Adelph Club, Hull
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Nearby Places

Newland, Kingston upon Hull
Newland, Kingston upon Hull

Newland is a suburb of Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, in the north-west of the city, a former village on the Hull to Beverley turnpike. Before the mid 18th century Newland was a hamlet in a partially swampy agricultural area, located near the crossroads of Cottingham and Beverley-Hull turnpikes. Extensive enclosure and drainage took place after 1766, and it briefly developed as a preferred place for Hull merchants in the 19th century. The future parish church, St John's, was built in 1833, and in 1862 the ecclesiastical parish of Newland was established as separate from Cottingham in the East Riding. By the beginning of the 20th century the urban spread of Hull had reached Newland, and over the next half century the village was surrounded by housing and other developments. The modern area of Newland includes and the former site of the Kingston upon Hull Municipal Training College (est. 1913), later the University of Humberside and now part of the neighbouring Hull University (est. 1925), as well as the Newland Park estate, and the Newland Avenue areas. Other notable structures in the area include the former Endsleigh convent (orig. built 1876, expanded), and former Sailor's Orphan's Homes (1890s), and the modern Humberside Police headquarters (2012). The Newland area extends along Clough Road to the River Hull – east of the Cottingham/ Beverley Road crossroads, where the area is in primarily industrial and commercial use. On the banks of the Hull is a chemical works of the Croda company.