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Anlaby Road

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A sports venue is a building, structure, or place in which a sporting competition is held.

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8-541: 53°44′45″N 0°21′53″W  /  53.74583°N 0.36472°W  / 53.74583; -0.36472 Anlaby Road was a sports venue in Hull . The ground was used for football club Hull City between 1906 and 1939. The record attendance was 32,000 in a FA Cup game against Newcastle United . The stands were bombed during the Second World War but Hull City used the site for training and reserve matches until 1965, when

16-451: A 1–0 home defeat by Preston North End a crowd incident resulted in the ground being closed for the first fourteen days of the 1934–35 season. Hull City suspended their operations in 1941 as a result of the war . The ground was damaged during the Blitz of Hull and estimated repair costs were in the region of £1,000. At the same time, the cricket club had been served notice to quit and in 1943,

24-442: A field or stage either partly or completely surrounded by a tiered structure designed to allow spectators to stand or sit and view the event. There are various types of sporting venues, depending on the sport played. For example: the racetrack for car racing, the hippodrome for horse racing, the velodrome for cycling, and the swimming pool for swimming. Some sporting venues can accommodate over one hundred thousand spectators, such as

32-464: A railway line was built over the pitch. Hull City football club played its first game at Dairycoates then seventeen games at The Circle cricket ground. The club then moved to their own ground, Anlaby Road adjacent to the Circle. The ground was opened on 24 March 1906 with 2,000 spectators in the covered stand for the visit of Blackpool , which ended in a 2–2 draw. The covered stand was extended to 8,000 by

40-506: A section of rail track to link the East Coast line to Scarborough and allow the removal of three level crossings . Hull City AFC, along with Hull F.C. , moved to the new Kingston Communications Stadium built on the land at Hull Circle in December 2002. Sports venue A stadium (plural: stadiums or stadia) or arena is a place or venue for sports or other events and consists of

48-406: The start of the 1907–08 season with a further 8,000 capacity of uncovered terrace. The season passes for the first season cost one guinea (£1–1s–0d/£1.05). Over the next few years, parts of the north and east stands were covered over despite wind damage to several sections of the stand. On Easter Monday 1914, a few hours after a 0–2 defeat at home to Bury , a fire destroyed the main stand and it

56-464: The tenancy was officially ended. The team then moved to Boothferry Park . Although the Hull City first team never played at Anlaby Road again, football was played at the Circle until 1965. This included several war time fixtures, two seasons of use by Hull Amateurs and Junior matches for Hull City. The last game at the ground was played on 20 April 1965 and two days later it was demolished to make way for

64-434: Was only the considerable efforts of the fire brigade that prevented the destruction of the north stand too. The cause was never determined though speculation included a carelessly discarded cigarette, arson and even the actions of suffragettes . The stand was replaced in the summer with a new brick and steel structure provided largely through the generosity of one of Hull City's directors, Bob Mungall. On 21 April 1934 after

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