Rolling Stones Blackpool Riot
During the Rolling Stones’ 24 July 1964 show at the Empress Ballroom in Blackpool, disorder broke out in the crowd and the concert ended in a riot. Sources consistently report major venue damage and a long-running local ban, but injury totals and hospital treatment figures vary sharply between later accounts.
Core Details
What Happened
- Date
- 24 July 1964
- Location
- Empress Ballroom, Winter Gardens Blackpool, Lancashire, England
- Incident Name
- Rolling Stones at the Empress Ballroom, Blackpool
- Reported Injuries
- Conflicting: 30+ to around 50; hospital treatment disputed
- Reported Fatalities
- No fatalities found in reviewed sources
Core Findings
Riot, Damage and a Ban
The incident is consistently placed at the Empress Ballroom inside the Winter Gardens Blackpool complex on 24 July 1964. Later reports describe disorder breaking out during the Rolling Stones’ performance and the show ending in chaos.
The most repeated damage claims include smashed chandeliers, torn-out seating, and a damaged or smashed Steinway grand piano. Reuters, The Guardian, The Independent and other later sources all link the disorder to the long Blackpool ban that was lifted in 2008.
The injury picture is weaker. Reports range from two policemen and 30 fans injured through to about 50 minor injuries, while The Independent frames the hospital-treatment figure differently from Ultimate Classic Rock.
View disputed details →Quick View
Incident Highlights
The Blackpool Empress Ballroom disturbance occurred during the Stones’ early touring period.
Reuters describes a 7,000-strong crowd in one account of the incident.
The Blackpool ban is widely reported as lasting until it was lifted in 2008.
Some sources cite damage above £4,000, while later accounts mention higher estimates.
Chronology
Known Sequence
24 July 1964 — show at Empress Ballroom
The Rolling Stones performed at Blackpool’s Empress Ballroom inside the Winter Gardens complex.
Crowd disorder begins
Later sources describe the disorder as linked to a crowd member spitting at Brian Jones, with other accounts also mentioning Keith Richards’ response.
Concert collapses into riot
Sources report that the show ended in chaos, with police restoring order and the performance cut short.
Venue damage reported
Repeated claims include smashed chandeliers, torn seating, and a damaged Steinway grand piano.
Blackpool ban follows
Later reporting states Blackpool barred the band from returning until the ban was lifted in 2008.
Date and Venue Strong
Multiple sources match 24 July 1964 and place the incident at the Empress Ballroom, Winter Gardens Blackpool.
Damage Strongly Repeated
Chandeliers, seats and the Steinway piano appear across several later reports.
Injury Totals Weak
The injury count and hospital treatment details conflict across sources and should not be treated as settled.
Ban Widely Reported
The 44-year Blackpool ban and 2008 lifting are strongly repeated in Reuters and other outlets.
The core incident and venue damage are well supported by repeated later reporting. The exact injury count, hospital treatment figure, damage cost and immediate trigger remain disputed.
Conflicting Information
What Does Not Fully Match
Disputed Detail
Injury Count
Sources do not agree on the number of people injured.
Editorial note: these figures are materially different, and no open primary source in the supplied research settles the count.
Disputed Detail
Hospital Treatment
The hospital-treatment detail is especially inconsistent.
Editorial note: this is a major difference, so the safer wording is that hospital treatment is disputed.
Disputed Detail
Damage Estimate
The financial cost of the venue damage varies between reports.
Editorial note: the damage itself is widely repeated; the exact cost is not settled.
Disputed Detail
Immediate Trigger
Accounts broadly agree on spitting at the band, but not on what should be treated as the direct trigger.
Editorial note: these may describe the same chain of events, but they frame causation differently.
Unverified Details
The exact number of injured people was not verified.
The exact number treated in hospital or taken to hospital remains disputed.
The exact financial damage total was not settled by the reviewed sources.
The exact song count or precise time before the show stopped was not verified.
The current venue address was identified, but the exact street address wording used in 1964 was not verified.
No fatalities were found in the reviewed sources.
References
Source Cards
Reuters
UK seaside town lifts 44-year Rolling Stones ban
27 March 2008
Reports Blackpool lifted the long-standing ban. It ties the ban to the 1964 Empress Ballroom riot, describing smashed chandeliers, torn seats, and a trashed Steinway grand piano after a crowd incident involving Brian Jones.
Visit Source →Reuters
UK seaside town lifts 44-year Rolling Stones ban
28 March 2008
Second Reuters URL for the same report. It describes a 7,000-strong crowd and damage to chandeliers, seats, and a Steinway grand piano.
Visit Source →The Independent
Sympathy for the Stones as Blackpool buries the hatchet over 1964 riot
28 March 2008
States the 24 July 1964 show ended in chaos, with chandeliers, seats, and a Steinway piano smashed. It reports about 50 audience members treated in hospital and police with dogs restoring order.
Visit Source →The Guardian
Blackpool forgives Rolling Stones 1964 riot
28 March 2008
Reports Blackpool lifted the ban in 2008. It describes the incident as following a crowd member spitting at Brian Jones, ending with smashed chandeliers, torn-out seats, and a badly damaged Steinway grand piano.
Visit Source →ABC News Australia
Stones' 44-year Blackpool ban lifted
28 March 2008
Carries the Reuters account that the ban followed a riot at the Empress Ballroom after a crowd member reportedly spat at Brian Jones.
Visit Source →Ultimate Classic Rock
60 Years Ago: The Stones Get Banned From Blackpool for 44 Years
24 July 2024
Retrospective saying the support act was shouted down, the Stones’ set lasted about 12 minutes, about 50 people suffered minor injuries, and two were taken to hospital.
Visit Source →whynow
The night the Rolling Stones rocked Blackpool into chaos and got banned from the city for almost 50 years
12 April 2024
Retrospective identifying the 24 July 1964 Empress Ballroom show as the event that led to the long Blackpool ban.
Visit Source →This Day In Music
What Happened on July 24th in Music
Page entry for 24 July 1964
Says the riot broke out after Keith Richards kicked a man who was spitting at the group. It reports two policemen and 30 fans injured, damage over £4,000, and a 44-year ban.
Visit Source →Real Rock and Blues
On This Day – Rolling Stones Riot!
22 July 2017
Reports the Blackpool show ended in a riot after spitting at Brian Jones and Keith Richards’ response. It gives damage estimates ranging from £4,000 to £10,000 and says two policemen and more than 30 fans were injured.
Visit Source →Blackpool Timeline
Rolling Stones Riot at Winter Gardens
2024
Local-history account placing the riot at the Empress Ballroom in the Winter Gardens and framing it as one of Blackpool’s most notorious rock incidents.
Visit Source →Winter Gardens Blackpool
Our Story
No page date stated
Winter Gardens heritage page confirming the Empress Ballroom is part of the Winter Gardens Blackpool complex. Used for venue identification, not casualty figures.
Visit Source →Winter Gardens Blackpool
Empress Ballroom
No page date stated
Venue page identifying the Empress Ballroom as a venue within Winter Gardens Blackpool and giving its present-day capacity as 3,250.
Visit Source →National Association of Teachers of Dancing
Empress Ballroom – Winter Gardens, Blackpool
No page date stated
Venue listing giving the current address as 97 Church St, Blackpool, FY1 1HU. Used for location support.
Visit Source →University of Freiburg
I Can Get Satisfaction
27 March 2017
Institutional article quoting Reinhold Karpp’s diary, recalling that the Empress Ballroom show was stopped after only four songs because a riot had started.
Visit Source →Nico Zentgraf
Rolling Stones database 1964
No page date stated
Chronology confirming a Rolling Stones performance at Blackpool’s Empress Ballroom on 24 July 1964. Used for date-and-venue matching only.
Visit Source →Source Links
Open Source List
The Independent
Sympathy for the Stones as Blackpool buries the hatchet over 1964 riot
28 March 2008
Open →Ultimate Classic Rock
60 Years Ago: The Stones Get Banned From Blackpool for 44 Years
24 July 2024
Open →whynow
The night the Rolling Stones rocked Blackpool into chaos and got banned from the city for almost 50 years
12 April 2024
Open →National Association of Teachers of Dancing
Empress Ballroom – Winter Gardens, Blackpool
No page date stated
Open →