Cambridge: Nightlife
Places and attractions in the Nightlife category
Categories
- Universities and schools
- Historical place
- Church
- Park
- Shopping
- Museum
- Bridge
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Sacred and religious sites
- Nightlife
- Street
- Shopping district
- Science museum
- Specialty museum
- Concerts and shows
- Art museum
- Library
- History museum
- Theater
- Cemetery
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Monastery
University Pitt Club
Tucked away in the historic city of Cambridge, the University Pitt Club, commonly known as the Pitt Club, stands as a testament to the enduring traditions of Cambridge University's social scene. Founded in 1835, the club was named in honor of William Pitt the Younger...
Cambridge Corn Exchange
Cambridge Corn Exchange is a concert venue located in Cambridge, England with a capacity up to 1,681 people.
Cambridge Junction
Cambridge Junction is a live music and arts venue in Cambridge, England. The principal venue was opened to the south of the railway station and on the site of the city's former Cattle Market in 1990, as "The Junction".
The Eagle
The Eagle is a Grade II listed public house in Cambridge, England which opened in 1667 as a coaching inn. It is the second oldest pub in Cambridge, after the Pickerell Inn.
Fort St George
The Fort St George In England is the oldest pub on the River Cam in Cambridge, England. The Grade II listed timber-framed building on Midsummer Common dates in part from the 16th century, and although "much altered and enlarged over the years, still has considerable charm.
The Free Press
The Free Press is a pub in Prospect Row, Cambridge, England. The tiny snug, 6x5ft, is "surely the smallest pub room in Cambridgeshire", and the fittings are either original from the 1940s or copies. It is on the Regional Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors for East Anglia.
The Baron of Beef
The Baron of Beef is a pub in Bridge Street, Cambridge, England, owned by Bob Jones. Michael Peacock, columnist of the Town Crier, gave his former paper, the Daily Mirror, a story about Chris Curry and Clive Sinclair having a fight there.
Panton Arms
The Panton Arms is a pub in Cambridge, U.K. that is often frequented by scientists from the Engineering and Chemistry Department of the University of Cambridge.
The Champion of the Thames
The Champion of the Thames is a pub in King Street, Cambridge, England. The pub's name derives from an oarsman who won a sculling race on the Thames before moving to Cambridge in 1860. He required that all mail to him be addressed to "The Champion of the River Thames, King Street, Cambridge".
The Flying Pig
The Flying Pig is a public house in Hills Road, Cambridge. It was first recorded as The Engineer in 1844 and then renamed The Crown Inn in 1860.
St Radegund
St Radegund is a pub in King Street, Cambridge, England. It is named after St Radegund, a Frankish saint associated with the nearby Jesus College. It was closed under notice of forfeiture in August 2019 but is expected to reopen under a new landlord in 2021.