Rolling Stones Ulster Hall
The Rolling Stones played Belfast's Ulster Hall on 31 July 1964. Archival and retrospective sources say the show was abandoned after roughly 12 to 13 minutes, after only three songs, amid severe overcrowding and crowd hysteria.
What Happened
Core Findings
Research notes link the incident to The Rolling Stones' Belfast appearance at Ulster Hall. The strongest recurring account is that the performance was stopped after only three songs because the crowd conditions became unmanageable.
Sources describe the situation using phrases including crowd hysteria, disorder, chaos and outrage. A UTV archive item says around 3,000 people were packed into the hall and records an allegation that the capacity was known to be about 1,200.
The source set does not confirm a firm injury count. A newspaper archive snippet and a later Linen Hall source repeat figures of 400 people fainting and 25 taken to hospital, but names and full primary article details were not verified in the supplied research file.
No fatality report was found in the reviewed source set.
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Incident Highlights
Chronology
Known Sequence
Operational Picture
Evidence Strength
Conflicting Information
Disputed Details
The research file records three main points where sources differ or where earlier assumptions are not supported by the accessible source trail.
The supplied note included a 28 July 1964 date, but the accessible source trail supports 31 July 1964.
Sources differ slightly on how long the band played before the show stopped.
Both source trails indicate severe overcrowding, but exact figures vary.
Unverified Details
Source Review
Reference Cards
Open Sources