In the Times Obituary of Dickie Davies reference is made to Professional Wrestling coming from "Northern Venues and Working Mens Clubs".To take 1965 as just one example the venues listed in the excellent ITV Wrestling website demonstrate that if anything more of the venues were in the south and usually prestigious buildings within individual cities and towns
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In the north in the 50s/60s pro wrestling still had to compete with a not quite yet dead Lancashire Catch Wrestling scene. This may explain Tommy "Jack Dempsey" Moore's comment in The Wrestler circa 1965 that southern audiences were more sophisticated than the north because they appreciated good technical wrestling whereas northern audiences preferred "rough and tumble". In the north, purists could go to Lancashire wrestling meets instead of pro shows, whereas in the south, pro wrestling shows were their only option.
There was certainly wrestling in clubs, working mens and others, but these were usually independent shows. Bouts were not widely publicised, sometimes limited to a handwritten notice board in the club. This anonymity enabled Joint wrestlers to moonlight in relative safety. It's very unlikely any of these venues would be televised.
Not sure there were ever any broadcasts from what could be described as "working men's clubs"
Lazy writing, no research