Latitude: 53.8023 / 53°48'8"N
Longitude: -1.5473 / 1°32'50"W
OS Eastings: 429915
OS Northings: 434093
OS Grid: SE299340
Mapcode National: GBR BJJ.6S
Mapcode Global: WHC9D.6PGG
Plus Code: 9C5WRF23+W3
Entry Name: The Town and Country Club (The O2 Academy)
Listing Date: 25 June 1975
Last Amended: 11 September 1996
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1375235
English Heritage Legacy ID: 466117
Also known as: Leeds Academy
Coliseum, Leeds
Gaumont
Norwood Studios
Town & Country
Creation
O2 Academy
The Town and Country Club
Coliseum Cinema
Gaumont Theatre
ID on this website: 101375235
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2
County: Leeds
Electoral Ward/Division: City and Hunslet
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Leeds
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Leeds City
Church of England Diocese: Leeds
Tagged with: Theatre Cinema Gothic art Music venue
This list entry was subject to a Minor Enhancement on 05/06/2018
SE3037SE
714-1/74/137
LEEDS
COOKRIDGE STREET (West side)
No. 55, The Town and Country Club (The O2 Academy)
(Formerly listed as The Town and Country Club, COOKRIDGE STREET, previously listed as: COOKRIDGE STREET (West side) Theatre-in-Education and Workshops for Leeds Playhouse)
25/06/75
GV
II
Formerly known as: The Town and Country Club, COOKRIDGE STREET and The Coliseum Theatre COOKRIDGE STREET.
Theatre, now a music venue.1885. By William Bakewell. Ashlar facade, brick to sides and rear, slate roof. Gothic Revival style front of four bays. Central entrance arch enriched with carved foliage, carved panels above with shields of the principal Yorkshire towns of the day; large rose window and panelled parapet with statue of Britannia at the apex. Lower flanking bays have panelled double doors in round arch with stained glass in the fanlight, paired and single round-arched stair windows above; three-light windows with plate tracery and balustraded balcony to upper floor. The bays divided by corbelled buttresses with finials. Gabled outer wings with altered entrances.
INTERIOR: no original features seen at Review; floor levels changed, seating removed, open to roof.
HISTORIC NOTE: Built as the Coliseum Theatre and opened by the Prince and Princess of Wales, the great hall was described as 'one of the finest in the north of England' (Kelly, 1913) and was the property of Taylor's Drug Company Ltd.
The Coliseum was used for political meetings and it became a site for protests by the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU), the militant suffrage organisation founded by Emmeline Pankhurst in Manchester in 1903. Several women were thrown out of the building for disrupting a speech by Liberal MP John Burns in December 1907. In October 1908 when Prime Minister Asquith visited Leeds local suffragettes and leaders of the local unemployed held a large protest meeting outside the Coliseum. Jeanie Baines, a WSPU organiser, urged the crowd to ‘break down the doors’ of the building; she was arrested and became the first woman to be tried by jury for a suffrage offence. When Asquith returned to speak at the Coliseum in November 1913 large numbers of mounted police kept suffragette demonstrators on the other side of the road, and several windows in adjacent buildings were smashed during this protest. The theatre became the Gaumont cinema in 1928, and in the 1960s it became a rehearsal room and workshops for Leeds Playhouse before being turned into a nightclub, and later a music venue in 2008.
This list entry was amended in 2018 as part of the centenary commemorations of the 1918 Representation of the People Act.
Listing NGR: SE2991534093
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings