Crawley Baths

Former swimming facility in Perth, Western Australia

Crawley Baths c. 1920–1929

Crawley Baths was a public swimming facility, in Matilda Bay, near Crawley, Western Australia along Mounts Bay Road. The timber structure was opened on 7 February 1914.[1] The opening ceremony was conducted by Premier John Scaddan and included a swimming carnival and life saving displays.[2]

The baths were the largest enclosed body of water in the southern hemisphere and were an important recreational facility in Perth for fifty years.[2] They were demolished in 1964 after Beatty Park was built for the 1962 Commonwealth Games.

A bronze statue Eliza commemorates the baths and stands in the river near its former location.

See also

  • Perth City Baths

References

  1. ^ "Bathing". State Library of Western Australia - Swan River Stories. Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Crawley Baths Art project Development proposal" (PDF). City of Perth. 2 September 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2011.

External links

  • Sunday Times February 1936 (photo of children's swimming classes at Crawley Baths)

31°58′21″S 115°49′48″E / 31.9726°S 115.83°E / -31.9726; 115.83