Place
ContributeThe Adelaide City Baths, owned by the Corporation of the City of Adelaide, stood on King William Road in a prominent position beside Parliament House and opposite Government House. The first baths opened in 1861, and Turkish Baths were added a few years later. In 1883 the baths underwent major refurbishment, with a new two-storey Tarlee stone building fronting the street, designed by the city surveyor in a strange mixture of Jacobean and Italianate styles. At their opening, Mayor Edward Glandfield said he had been ‘told the building was in the Elizabethan style and added to the beauties of King William Street, but he did not altogether agree with that’. For 78 years the baths were operated by a family dynasty, leased from their inception by Thomas Bastard, and then from 1883 to 1939 by his son Charles. A second refurbishment in 1940 saw the baths fitted with an Olympic-sized pool and a high diving platform, while given a bland Modernist façade. The City Baths were an important social institution for over a century, particularly when the inner city supported a large residential population. Less used after the post-Second World War population shift to the suburbs and changed recreation patterns, the baths were demolished in 1969 to make way for the Adelaide Festival Centre. The Festival Plaza now occupies their site.
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I believe ladies were admitted but had a separate area Margaret (see http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article50078634) and in 1883 when the baths were rebuilt women were again bathing separately to men (see http://www.samemory.sa.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1209). If you are looking for more click on the 'learn more' at the top right of the article and that will tell you the author's sources.
Just wondering if women were allowed to bathe at the baths when they were first opened in 1861, or was it restricted to men and children? I have no idea when it became fashionable and ok for women to bathe in public. Would love to learn what the custom was at the time in Adelaide.
luv a bathhouse or sauna - not that pulteney st thing
Great memories Merilyn,
the Baths seem to hold a special place in the heart of many Adelaide people.
I remember the City Baths well, and loved to swim there with friends on hot Adelaide days. The Bush biscuit at the end, once we were dressed was welcome too, as we went around to the side of the building to watch the others swimming and frolicking through the big glass windows.
We weren't allowed to go there when the polio epidemic was at its height.