{"id":2196,"date":"2022-06-14T09:26:08","date_gmt":"2022-06-14T09:26:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/?page_id=2196"},"modified":"2022-10-02T14:12:51","modified_gmt":"2022-10-02T14:12:51","slug":"pittville-baths","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/pittville-baths\/","title":{"rendered":"Pittville baths"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h2 class=\"alignwide has-text-align-center has-tertiary-color has-text-color has-background has-huge-font-size wp-block-heading\" style=\"background-color:#647d35\"><strong><strong>Pittville\u2019s Outdoor Swimming Baths<\/strong><\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"alignwide has-tertiary-background-color has-background has-small-font-size wp-block-heading\" style=\"line-height:1.8\"><em>Introduction<\/em><br><br>Mention swimming pools in Cheltenham today, and most people will think either of Sandford Lido, or the indoor pools in Tommy Taylor\u2019s Lane. It\u2019s perhaps surprising to learn that the first swimming facilities in the town were established almost two centuries ago. A small-scale \u2018swimming and bathing place\u2019 was set up on a \u00bd-acre site adjacent to the Exmouth Arms on the Bath Road in about 1820, but a few years later, a rather more elaborate enterprise had opened up on the north side of town, on the edge of Pittville.<br><br><span style=\"float:left; margin: 15px 25px\"><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-2197\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"372\" height=\"325\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image1.jpg 511w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image1-300x262.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 372px) 100vw, 372px\" \/><\/span>The best introduction comes via Merrett\u2019s 1834 map. Just off the Prestbury Road, before it crosses Wyman\u2019s Brook (so, about 50 yards north of today\u2019s BP service station) we can see marked an extensive feature named as Swimming Baths, and an adjacent public house, the Pittville Arms, with a fives court attached. Around the swimming baths are trees or bushes, and assorted structures. A wall separates the baths from the fives court, and it appears that entry is gained from the rear of the pub. On the north side of the brook is a smaller area with its own water feature, seemingly accessed via a gap in the hedge and (presumably) a little bridge.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br><br>Research in local newspapers reveals that the baths, which probably operated only in the summer season, had come into being five years before Merrett\u2019s map. An announcement in the <em>Cheltenham Chronicle<\/em> of 4 June 1829 runs thus:<br><br><center><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><strong>PITTVILLE SWIMMING BATH<\/strong><\/span><br><center><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\">Situate on the PRESTBURY ROAD, (about five minutes\u2019 walk from the High Street.)<em>JOHN GOODCHILD begs respectfully to inform his friends and the public, that he has just opened the above BATHS; and that he has engaged an experienced Swimmer to instruct those Gentlemen who may wish to learn that useful art. This Bath is well adapted for Children, as it is paved and roped round in regular and graduated depths.<\/em><\/span><\/center><\/center><br>Goodchild was actually the lessee of the grounds. The baths formed part of a 5\u00bc-acre plot owned by Henry Haines, a successful builder who had properties in Winchcombe Street and elsewhere on the north side of town. His name features in the building history of several Pittville houses.<br><br><center><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-2198\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image6.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"60%\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image6.jpg 740w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image6-300x277.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 740px) 100vw, 740px\" \/><figcaption><em>Pittville Baths on the 1883 Ordnance Survey 25\u201d map; the pond is still visible,<\/em><br><em>though reduced in size, on 1920s OS mapping.<\/em><\/figcaption><\/center>Steven Blake has calculated that by 1830, the year the Pump Room was officially opened, barely 20 houses had been built or started in Pittville. This was surely not the progress that Joseph Pitt had originally hoped for; nevertheless, \u2018Pittville\u2019 was clearly a name with pulling power, which probably explains why, although it lies outside the formal boundary of the Pittville estate, the new outdoor bathing pool was called the \u2018Pittville Swimming Bath\u2019. As for the Pittville Arms: knowing that Pitt\u2019s covenant conditions forbade such establishments in Pittville itself, it is a fair guess that the pub was set up to cater for refreshment needs that could not be met within the confines of the estate proper.&nbsp;<br><br>The following week, the <em>Chronicle<\/em> commented enthusiastically, implying that this was indeed the first proper swimming bath in town: \u2018<em>The number of subscribers to these Baths since the commencement of the season affords an ample proof of the necessity that existed for such an establishment in Cheltenham; and we have much pleasure in stating that every arrangement for the accommodation of the public is now complete, two boats having recently been launched on the piece of water for the use of those who wish to indulge in the exercise of rowing.\u2019<\/em> (It was of course not until Pittville Park had been created, in the 1890s, that rowing on the Pittville lakes was introduced.)<br><br>Goodchild seems not to have prospered, for in the <em>Chronicle<\/em> of 9 July 1829, a Mr Archer is to the fore, and we have the first press mention of the pub, here called the Pittville Inn:<br><br><center><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-2199\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image2.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"554\" height=\"275\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image2.jpg 568w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image2-300x149.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 554px) 100vw, 554px\" \/><\/center><br>Archer\u2019s advertisement shows certain developments: apart from the addition of a place of refreshment, which would have been the first on the route in from Prestbury, we see the morning-only rule. As the swimming was restricted to men, was this to make it easier to accommodate a mixed clientele from lunchtime onwards?&nbsp;<br><br>Archer was still the lessee in 1830, but did not himself advertise again. Nothing substantial is heard of the Pittville Inn or the baths until this new announcement in the <em>Cheltenham Chronicle<\/em> of 26 May 1831:<br><br><span style=\"margin-left:50px;\"><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><strong>PITTVILLE SWIMMING BATHS, PRESTBURY ROAD<\/strong><\/span><\/span><br><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><em>MESSRS. HAINES and MAGGS beg to announce to the Public, that their BATHING ESTABLISHMENT, which has undergone most extensive alterations and improvements, will now be found the most complete in the kingdom. The Baths and extensive Pleasure Gardens will be ready for the reception of the Public FRIDAY Evening, the 27th of May inst. when a Band of Music will be in attendance.<\/em><\/span><br><span style=\"margin-left:50px;\"><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><em>*<sub>*<\/sub>* Several Pleasure Boats are kept on the Water.<\/em><\/span><\/span><br><br>As an established builder, Henry Haines would certainly have had the skills and resources to make whatever improvements the baths needed, but this announcement almost certainly refers to his son Thomas Haines, who at about this time entered into partnership with Thomas Maggs &#8211; the latter apparently looking for a new venture, after breaking away in January 1830 from his previous partnership in the Maggs family firm of drapers in the High Street.<br><br>The following week, the paper gave a rather fuller picture of the whole establishment, and suggests that among the changes were an increase in the size of the pool, and the introduction of tea gardens:<br><br><center><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><strong>PITTVILLE<\/strong><br>Subscription Swimming Bath,<br>And Tea Gardens,<br>PITTVILLE HOTEL, on the PRESTBURY ROAD.<\/span><\/center><span style=\"font-size:0.8em\"><em>The Inhabitants of Cheltenham and its Vicinity are respectfully informed, that Messrs. HAINES and MAGGS have TAKEN to the above BATH and GARDENS, which having recently undergone great improvements and embellishments, ARE NOW OPEN, and will be conducted on such plans as they trust will meet the support of their Friends and the Public. The Swimming Bath is very spacious, covering the space of Two Acres,<\/em><sup><a href=\"#ftn1\">1<\/a><\/sup><em> with a perpetual Current from the most delightful Hill Springs which pass on to the Lake at Pittville, so that if required the depth of the water may be rose or sunk in a very short period.<sup><a href=\"#ftn2\">2<\/a><\/sup> The portion of the Bath adapted for Juvenile Bathers, is roped round, and the bottom paved to the extent of one thousand feet, which graduates in depth from 2\u00bd feet to 5 feet.&nbsp;<\/em><br><center>\u261e&nbsp;<em> Subscription Books, with the Terms, are open at the Libraries and Pump Rooms.*<sub>*<\/sub>*Hours of Bathing from five o&#8217;clock until ten in the morning. Pleasure Boats after the hours of Bathing.<\/em><\/center><\/span><br>The fact that subscriptions could be taken out at the Pump Rooms may indicate that Pitt, or at least the Pittville Pump Room lessee on his behalf, was happy to have Haines and Maggs as neighbours.<br><br>As the summer progressed, and with the town crowded with racegoers, the attractions expanded to include musical concerts, firework displays, and a military band.<br><br><center><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"492\" height=\"608\" class=\"wp-image-2209\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image3.jpg\" alt=\"\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image3.jpg 492w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image3-243x300.jpg 243w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 492px) 100vw, 492px\" \/><figcaption><em>Cheltenham Journal and Gloucestershire Fashionable Weekly Gazette<\/em><br>18 July 1831<\/figcaption><\/center>Despite the mostly positive reception in the local press, it appears that Haines and Maggs were unable or unwilling to sustain this level of enterprise, and we no longer see references to these \u2018Pittville Gardens\u2019 after 1831 \u2013 later occurrences of the term all relate to the gardens within Pittville proper. It is quite likely that, on the north side of town at least, the expanding programme of attractions organised by Henry Seymour, lessee at the Pump Room from summer 1830, exerted a stronger pull.<br><br>1831 may have been the high point of the baths\u2019 popularity, for the following years show further changes of tenant, and little sign of additional seasonal attractions, until 1838, when, well past the end of the summer season, Cheltenham was promised a visit from the \u2018Yankee Leaper\u2019. The so-called \u2018Leaper\u2019 was a showman called Sam Scott, a native of Philadelphia and a former sailor who had made his name and his living by leaping (or diving) from great heights such as ships\u2019 masts and cliffs. He had arrived in the British Isles in late 1837, and executed his feats around the country. After \u2018extraordinary performances\u2019 in Bristol, in early October he dived 60ft from the top-mast of a barque into the canal at Gloucester docks. Reporting this, the <em>Chronicle<\/em> of Thursday 4 October promised that \u2018this afternoon\u2019 he would jump from a scaffold 100 feet high into the pond at the Pittville Hotel.<br><br>Performances such as Scott\u2019s were generally subject to a sufficient crowd having gathered, and it seems numerous Cheltonians were willing to put money in the hat when it was passed round: a week later, the <em>Chronicle<\/em> recorded that he had been \u2018exhibiting his prowess for some days past at the Pittville Hotel\u2019. &nbsp;<br><br>In 1839, all we hear of the Pittville Hotel is that a Chartist meeting was held in its gardens on the evening of 17 July, when a Mr Henry Vincent delivered a \u2018moral discourse\u2019 on the present state of Chartism. A large crowd of both sexes attended.<br><br>After this point, there is no evidence that the hotel, gardens or swimming bath were functioning. The final press reference to the hotel is in the <em>Cheltenham Examiner<\/em> of 11 March 1840, reporting that three lads had been charged with cutting and damaging the lead on the roof of a summer-house belonging to the Pittville Hotel \u2013 a sign perhaps that the establishment was in decline. Although probably aimed at different types of patron, it is likely that the hotel and baths had for several years been unable to compete with the flourishing entertainments programme at the Pump Room and elsewhere in the Pittville grounds. By 1838, there would also have been competition from the new Fox and Hounds public house, only a few yards up the road on the Prestbury side of Wyman\u2019s Brook.<br><br>Later references to a Pittville Hotel, in the 1850s, are to a separate establishment in Winchcombe Street.<br><br><br><em>Tailpiece<\/em><br><br>At some point in the 1840s Henry Haines moved to the Pittville Hotel and baths site, the former hotel then becoming his residence, when it was renamed Southam Villa. He died there in January 1850, aged 65, after a long illness, leaving to his son Thomas \u2018all that &#8230; house known as Southam Villa, with timber yard, stables, coach house and stable yard adjoining\u2019. Thomas Haines, who had already taken over the family building business, and recorded in the 1851 census as the employer of 200 men, was himself to die suddenly only months later, in November 1851, of a stroke or seizure.<br><br><center><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"925\" height=\"693\" class=\"wp-image-2210\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image4.jpg\" alt=\"\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image4.jpg 925w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image4-300x225.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image4-768x575.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 925px) 100vw, 925px\" \/><figcaption><em>98 Prestbury Rd today<\/em><\/figcaption><\/center>Of the 19th century buildings, the only recognisable part today is 98 Prestbury Road, the main body of the former Pittville Hotel\/Southam Villa. It has traces of classical pilasters on its frontage.<br><br>Of the swimming bath, which on an 1853 deed is marked simply as \u2018fish pond\u2019, and on the 1855-7 Old Town Survey even more laconically as \u2018pond\u2019, no trace remains. The area is now concreted over, the storage yard of a construction firm.<br><br><center><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1019\" height=\"866\" class=\"wp-image-2211\" src=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image5.jpg\" alt=\"\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image5.jpg 1019w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image5-300x255.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/06\/Baths-image5-768x653.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1019px) 100vw, 1019px\" \/><figcaption><em>1855-7 Cheltenham Old Town Survey<\/em><\/figcaption><\/center>The lesson we might take from this is that however \u2018spirited\u2019 the successive operators of the Pittville swimming baths might have been over their twelve years of existence, it must always have been difficult to gain sufficient custom, over a short summer season, to keep an outdoor swimming pool in good order and profitable. Another century was to elapse before a comparable facility was opened, this time as a municipal undertaking, at Sandford Lido.<br><br>James Hodsdon<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"alignwide has-tertiary-background-color has-background has-tiny-font-size wp-block-heading\" style=\"line-height:1.8\"><sup><a name=\"ftn1\">1<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;This must refer to the site as a whole, not the area of water.<br><sup><a name=\"ftn2\">2<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;The hydrology of the site is never made very clear, but unlike the lakes in Pittville proper, the swimming bath did not straddle the brook itself. At some point between the 1834 and 1855 maps, the length of brook between Prestbury Road and the bath site was culverted, and the subsequent section, where it ran alongside the bath, was straightened. The OS map of 1883 suggests that the flow of brook water into and out of the bath was controlled by sluices at each end.<\/h2>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Pittville\u2019s Outdoor Swimming Baths Introduction Mention swimming pools in Cheltenham today, and most people will think either of Sandford Lido, or the indoor pools in Tommy Taylor\u2019s Lane. It\u2019s perhaps surprising to learn that the first swimming facilities in the town were established almost two centuries ago. A small-scale \u2018swimming and bathing place\u2019 was set<a class=\"more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/pittville-baths\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">&#8220;Pittville baths&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-2196","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry","entry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2196","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2196"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2196\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2217,"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2196\/revisions\/2217"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pittvillehistory.org.uk\/wpt\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2196"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}