CLAREMONT BATHS, FRESHWATER BAY.

c. 1901
Overview

B/W post card. Looking across Freshwater Bay to the south east. In the foreground is a lattice dividing fence and picket fences along the shoreline. The Claremont Baths are in the centre and two jetties further to the east. There are several houses on the high ground surrounding the bay. Printed at the bottom of the image is [Swimming Baths, Freshwater Bay,/Claremont.] and [Published by The Austral Stores, Perth, W.A.] Handwritten in pencil on the right side is [2 miles From Home] The rear has the typical Post Card printing and in the top right corner is a trade mark ( An artist's pallette with a black swan and THE/AUSTRAL/SERIES) printed on it.

Historical information

In 1901, a tender was accepted for the construction of the Claremont Baths, situated at the end of Chester Road. The baths opened in March 1902. Mixed bathing was unacceptable. Women pressed for separate facilities in 1903. For many years the baths were major venue in WA for contesting national, state and school swimming titles; a training pool for many champions. A centre for teaching swimming and life-saving. Baths sharkproofed in 1920s after a fatal shark attack near Scotch College boatshed. 1936 main pool (boys' baths) extended to Olympic size (55 yards x 33 yards). The girls' baths were approximately 33 yards x 33 yards. (See 04.18 for aerial view and relative size).The baths were constructed on piles with boardwalks surrounding the pools. Living accommodation and changing cubicles were of weatherboard with iron roofs. The pools were separated from the river by open picket fencing. All woodwork immersed in water became heavily encrusted with sharp barnacles. A large (30 ft?) 2 tiered metal diving tower was located at the western end of the baths. This was later replaced with a smaller 10ft wooden tower that had one platform with springboard and another board at level with the boardwalk on the southern side of the baths. Changing cubicles bordered each of the pools on two sides. Known as 'bunks', these were approximately 3 feet x 4 feet with a seat across the back, pegs for clothes and a short door. Drying and dressing was near impossible when 3 or 4 students were allocated to a bunk during school swimming lessons. The baths became inadequate for aquatic events. Storm damage in 1971 led to demolition

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-28--10-115-
Item type
Year
Claremont Museum

Claremont Museum

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