Here are a few photos of the old swimming pool that have
come my way over the years.
Well yesterday I managed to put the wrong construction
decade in the answer to a comment on facebook
The big question surrounding the pool is, why did it close?
Personally I think this is mostly a temperature related thing, and base this on
having been in it, I would say swum swam wosisname, however my series of doggy
paddle, floating and whatnot is probably best described as delayed drowning,
but the main problem there is the water was very cold.
Perhaps not an issue back in the 1930s when the pool first
opened as I think heated public swimming pools started to appear in the UK just
before WW2, but didn’t really become common until the 1960s. I think the same
can be said for heaters in cars, the first cars I could afford dated from the
1940s and 50s and mostly didn’t have heaters, meaning you and the windscreen
froze while right next to you was a radiator full of boiling water.
And while yes you can heat outdoor swimming pools, I think
those like the Ramsgate one that used constantly changing filtered seawater to
keep the contents clean enough to swim in would be prohibitively expensive to heat.
Of course there are plenty of people who would pay to swim
in an unheated seawater swimming pool next to the sea, we used to when we were
children, but I think the main reason for the closure was that there just
weren’t enough of them in 1976 when the repair bill was fairly large and it
closed for good.
I think another aspect was the closure of the high diving
board, which was one of the pool’s main attractions, so there is a safety elf
element.
Then there are the rumours.
Some say it was a council blunder that damaged Ramsgate
marina swimming pool so badly it could never be used again. The story goes that
some bright council officer decided to take the running of it from the borough
engineers and give it to the councils leisure department. The sceptical
engineers handed it to the leisure department with a set of instructions about
running and maintaining it, one of which was never to empty it without
supporting the seaward facing side. This was because it was designed so the
weight of the water inside counteracted the forces of the sea battering against
it. The first thing the leisure department did when they took it over was to
empty it unsupported. In the resulting cover up councillors were told that the
damage was caused bomb during WW2 that had weakened the structure.
Some say the problem was the old design of the building and
that the pool was actually on 'stilts' and you could walk underneath it at low
tide. As the tide came in the void was filled with seawater. The dated building
measures made this a fatal design fault. Gradually the chalk below began to
erode, and as a result the foundations moved, causing the pool to crack. This
was patched for years until repairs were impossible. It was also too expensive
to replace.
Some say that the chalk at sea edge was excavated
deliberately and that the council failed to stop this.
There is plenty of information on the internet about
Ramsgate Marina Bathing Pool.
Some different pictures at Seas Photography http://www.seasphotography.org.uk/archives/tag/marina%20swimming%20pool
Learned to swim in the Marina pool in the mid 1960s - Monday night swimming club. Very popular, Dad queued a good while to get membership for me. Boy was it cold, as even on a sunny day the sun was down behind the main building by the evening start.
ReplyDeleteAlso recall 'officiating/crowd control' there as a scout when 'It's a Knockout' came to Thanet.
I lived in RAMSGATE as a boy and remember visiting the pool many times.. THANET was truly magical in 50/60s and the seafront area only started to decline mid 70s...The pool is now a carpark.
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