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About the venue

The Old Bull was first referred to as the Black Bull in 1520, several years before the English reformation, in an inquisition Post Mortem on the death of Richard Gery, who was the owner.

It has provided overnight accommodation throughout its history. In the Eighteenth century The Royston Club meeting rooms were taken down from the Red Lion and re-erected as Assembly rooms at The Old Bull, which then became Royston's main venue for ceremonial celebrations, including the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria. Kingston records show that the Magistrates petty sessions were held at the Old Bull. When the new court houses were built in 1849, they were ordered to transfer but resisted on the grounds that the new county court would be less comfortable and not at all more convenient than the room at the Bull. We have the 'Oak Room' & 'Ballroom' which are interlinked to provide a facility to accommodate a maximum of 220 persons. For a more formal affair we can seat 110 in the Ballroom, using the Oak Room as the reception area with it's own integral bar.

Location

Nearest motorway-
Nearest junction-
Nearest station-
Nearest airport-

Parking

On-site parking-
Parking nearbyNo

Meeting rooms

In the table below, you can hover over the underlined room names to see a photo of that room.

Room name
Capacity (people)
Theatre
Classroom
Boardroom
Cabaret
Banquet
Ushape
Rec.
Dimensions(H/L/W/A)

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