East Ella
East Ella is a small suburb to the west of the northern England city of Kingston upon Hull. East Ella was an area of common land to the east of the nearby village of Anlaby and the west of Hull and was in the County Borough of Kingston upon Hull.
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Springhead engine shed
Springhead engine shed was an engine shed located in the City of Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire, England and was opened by the Hull and Barnsley Railway (HBR) in 1885. The shed was closed by British Railways in July 1961 and subsequently demolished.
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Anlaby Common
Anlaby Common is former common land, now an outer suburb of Kingston upon Hull. The area includes the residential areas which are located on the western urban fringe of Hull; the B1231 road (Hull Road/Springfield Way) passes through all of Anlaby Common's estates, east to west.
As of 2011 the western part of the land is located in the civil parish of Anlaby with Anlaby Common in the East Riding of Yorkshire; whilst the eastern part of the land is located in Kingston upon Hull.
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Anlaby Park
Anlaby Park is a small suburb just to the west of the city centre of Kingston upon Hull, England. The area is sandwiched between the B1231 Anlaby Road to the north, and the A1105 Boothferry Road to the south. Anlaby Park is represented by three unitary authority wards (Tranby, Boothferry, and Pickering), and is represented at Westminster as part of the Kingston upon Hull and Haltemprice constituency.
A library was established in Anlaby park in 1964, and then in 2013 threatened with closure. It later reopened as a community-run library. Anlaby Park conservation area was created in 1994.
996 m
Boothferry Park
Boothferry Park was a football stadium in Kingston upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, England, which was the home of Hull City from 1946 until 2002. The ground's capacity varied throughout its history, but stood at 15,160 at the time of its closure.
The Tigers moved into the newly built KC Stadium in the middle of the 2002–03 season. Following this, Boothferry Park was occupied solely by supermarkets Iceland and Kwik Save, both of whom had opened stores inside the ground's structure in the 1990s when the football club was struggling financially. The first parts of the stadium were demolished in early 2008, more than five years after the last professional game was played there. The demolition was completed in 2011, with residential housing now standing on the site of the old ground.
The record attendance at Boothferry Park was set on 26 February 1949, when 55,019 spectators watched Hull face Manchester United in an FA Cup quarter-final. This remains the highest-ever attendance for a home match in the club's history. The stadium also occasionally hosted England youth internationals, as well as a singular senior international between Northern Ireland and Spain in 1972.
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