The Outdoor Swimming Pool

The pool in summer

A favourite leisure facility in Bourne for the past eighty years has been the outdoor swimming pool and its continuing success is a perfect example of how the will of the people can triumph over our faceless and often unthinking bureaucracy. In this case, it is also a testament to the endeavours of one local person, Mrs Lesley Patrick. 

The pool is one of the few traditional outdoor swimming pools remaining in the United Kingdom. It dates back to 1138 and was originally a carp pond to provide fish for the monks at Bourne Abbey and was converted into public swimming baths by keen local swimmers soon after the Great War of 1914-18. Bourne United Charities took over the pool in 1922 when major improvement work was carried out, with the erection of dressing rooms at either end and an approach to the baths from Coggles Causeway. The work of converting it from the old monks' pond was carried out by Mr T Hinson under the direction of a local committee comprising Mr T W Mays (president) and Mr W Waddington (honorary secretary) and the plans were drawn up by Mr R G Coles, surveyor to Bourne Urban District Council. 

An official opening by Lady Kesteven was held on Saturday 12th August 1922, having been postponed from the previous Monday because of wet weather. A report from the Stamford Mercury said: " Mr Mays presided and, in introducing Lady Kesteven, said that Bourne was to be congratulated on having such an excellent bath which had been talked about for the past 20 years. She congratulated the town on its enterprise and hoped that both boys and girls would learn to swim as they never knew when it would be useful in life-saving. Mr R A Gardner, from Bourne United Charities, proposed a vote of thanks to her ladyship and called attention to the recent saving of two persons' lives by a lad of ten years of age. The opening ceremony was followed by water sports for competitors of all ages and in the evening there was a water polo match between Stamford and Wisbech.

There has been a continuing programme of modernisation ever since, much of it paid for by the charity trustees although in recent years the pool has depended largely on voluntary financial support. During 1971, the town’s Round Table organisation raised sufficient funds to finance a heating system and shortly afterwards, South Kesteven District Council took over the running of the pool as part of its leisure and community activities programme, a move that eventually proved to be most unwise. 

In 1989, the new leisure centre with its own indoor heated swimming pool was opened by the council alongside the Robert Manning School and in their wisdom they decreed that the outdoor pool was redundant and should close because it would create too much competition for their own facility. It was at this point that Mrs Patrick took up the cudgel on behalf of the people of Bourne who were reluctant to lose their outdoor pool. A public meeting at the Corn Exchange attracted over 200 people. This was followed by a protest march through the town and a petition with 4,000 signatures of support and as a result a trust was formed with the objective of keeping and maintaining the pool for the benefit of the townspeople. 

Since 1990, the Outdoor Pool Preservation Trust has been run by volunteers to ensure that the pool has not only survived but its facilities enhanced and now include a toddler pool, sand pit and play house, all added with the help of a £10,000 grant from Bourne Town Council. There are indoor and outdoor changing rooms with lockers and toilets, extended lawns with seating and picnic tables, attractive gardens with hanging baskets, a refreshment area, sweet and snack shop and barbecues for hire. All of this is available in a most pleasant part of the town, surrounded by the Abbey Lawn and mature trees, an old garden wall and a magnificent view of Bourne Abbey. Qualified lifeguards are on duty at all times while first aid and life saving equipment are kept continuously at the poolside. 

Lesley Patrick became chairman of the trust when it was formed in 1990 but her endeavours on behalf of the outdoor pool also spurred her on to greater civic duty and despite having six children to bring up, she became a town councillor and served as Mayor of Bourne from 1994-95, also supporting a large number of other local organisations and charitable causes. Lesley Patrick

She resigned as trust chairman in 2000 to make way for others and Mrs Mandy Delaine-Smith was subsequently elected chairman at the annual general meeting and now heads the organising committee of fifteen members. But the pool is still close to Lesley's heart and every year she hopes for fine weather to ensure that her pet project continues on its successful path. 

The pool is just under the official Olympic length of 50 metres. It holds 250,000 gallons and is heated to a pleasant 27-30 degrees C during its opening period from mid-May to early September. There is an ongoing programme of improvements and many are made each year but there is always more work to be done and money remains a perpetual worry although there are frequent voluntary donations and a Gift Aid scheme is also in operation to help with the upkeep of facilities and to ensure that the pool is preserved as an amenity for the town in the future.

In 2004, the pool was given a £50,000 donation in the will of Len Pick, a local businessman and landowner who died in January, aged 94. He had always been a keen supporter of the pool and his bequest, part of a £4 million legacy for the benefit of the town, enabled the trustees to restore the fountain after ten years of disuse and it will in future be known as the Len Pick memorial fountain. The new feature was opened at the beginning of the 2005 summer season by one of the pool’s most loyal followers, Mrs Kath Cox, aged 94, a regular for 83 years who remembered those days when the sides were lined with corrugated iron and there was mud on the bottom.

But despite the many changes, the traditional look of the pool that has been part of its charm over past decades will stay. Lesley Patrick says: "We do not want to spoil the special atmosphere that has been established over the years but it is important that we keep up with the times to ensure that it remains one of the town’s most treasured summer amenities."

Visit by local MP in 1993
Photo: Courtesy Lincolnshire Free Press

The constituency's Member of Parliament, Mr Quentin Davies, visited the pool on 17th July 1993 to see the work of the organising committee and he is pictured here with some of the young swimmers busy enjoying the facility. With Mr Davies (middle centre) were Lesley Patrick, then a town councillor, and Councillor Don Fisher, an enthusiastic supporter of  the project who was also instrumental in keeping the pool open when it was threatened with closure.

REVISED SEPTEMBER 2005

See also     How the Outdoor Swimming Pool came to be built

The Outdoor Pool in past times     Learning to Swim

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