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Who Founded Hull City?

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Last updated on 2 min read

Hull City Association Football Club has called the MKM Stadium home since 1904, where up to 25,586 fans can cheer on the team.

Where exactly is Hull, and why does it matter?

Hull sits on the north bank of the Humber Estuary in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
Hull’s story is deeply tied to the water. Once a bustling fishing and trade hub, the city now balances its maritime roots with a modern identity. That 22-mile stretch to the North Sea? It’s shaped everything from the iconic Humber Bridge to Hull’s 2017 UK City of Culture title. Getting around is easy, too—you’ve got the A63 and A15 roads, the M62 motorway, and the Hull and Selby railway line all converging here. (Honestly, this is one of England’s best-connected cities.)

Quick facts about Hull City AFC

Category Detail
Full name Hull City Association Football Club
Nickname The Tigers
Founded 1904
Ground MKM Stadium
Ground capacity 25,586
Latitude, Longitude 53.7456° N, 0.3368° W
Metropolitan borough Kingston upon Hull
Region Yorkshire and the Humber

How did Hull City come to be, and what’s its vibe?

A group of local sports fans—including two former England internationals—launched Hull City in 1904.
The club joined the Football League Second Division the year after and spent decades building a reputation for grit. Those 1930s and 1940s Third Division North titles? Hard-earned. By the 1960s, Hull still stood out—local fishing crews worked Christmas Day, so the team often got a rare day off. Fast-forward to 2010, when Assem Allam took over and rebranded the club as “Hull Tigers” in 2014. Love it or hate it, the move brought commercial energy—and on-field success. The Tigers made it to the 2014 FA Cup Final, won League One in 2021, and even dabbled in Europe during the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League. Culturally? Hull’s got soul. Think Philip Larkin’s poetry, those quirky white telephone boxes, and a city that’s proud of its past while eyeing the future.

How do you get to Hull, and what’s there to do beyond football?

Fly into Humberside Airport, take a train to Hull Paragon Interchange, or drive via the A63 from the M62.
Once you’re in town, catching a match at the MKM Stadium is easy—it’s just a mile west of the city center. Parking fills up fast, so hop on a bus or grab a taxi. For a place to stay, the Royal Station Hotel offers Art Deco flair right by the station, while the Sleeperz Hotel keeps things simple and affordable near the marina. After the game, don’t miss the Humber Bridge—it’s one of the world’s longest single-span suspension bridges—or the Hull Maritime Museum in the docks. Art lovers should swing by the Ferens Art Gallery, where Frans Hals and Stanley Spencer’s works hang just a short walk from downtown.
Edited and fact-checked by the MeridianFacts editorial team.
James Cartwright

James Cartwright is a geography writer and former high school geography teacher who has spent 20 years making maps and distances interesting. He can name every capital city from memory and insists that geography is the most underrated subject in school.