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This cherished traditional swimming pool is where thousands of Reading people (including the writer) learned to swim, many under the stern eye of swimming teachers such as Reading’s own Charlie Burt. 

Dating from 1911, the Baths is the oldest sports facility in the borough; it is named after Arthur Hill JP, an enlightened and progressive Reading Councillor of the late Victorian era.   The Baths building stands on land that was donated by Mr Hill’s son in law, Dr Jamieson B Hurry (the famous historian of Reading Abbey), and it was erected, entirely at the family’s expense, as Arthur Hill’s memorial.  Hill‘s career included major work on modernising Reading’s public finances and its sewerage system.  He introduced Reading’s first Children’s Library and was an early benefactor of Reading University College.  Serving as Mayor from 1883 to 1887, he made many gifts to the town, including Reading’s famous copy of the Bayeux Tapestry. 

 

At the Grand Opening of the Baths in 1911, Dr Hurry formally handed over the property deeds into the keeping of the then Mayor on behalf of the people of Reading. Among those at the ceremony was Conrad Willcocks FRSBA, the local architect responsible for the building and its iconic neo-Georgian façade, and other worthies including Octavia Hill, the celebrated social reformer and a founder of the National Trust, who was Arthur Hill’s half-sister.

As well as the 90ft ‘swimming pond’, Willcocks specified six individual hot baths, for use by residents without a bath at home (and in 1911 they were a large majority).  These ‘slipper baths’ are no more, but the Arthur Hill Memorial Baths has created other ways to supply the leisure, health and sporting needs of the local community, fulfilling the aims of its original donors.

 

More information about the history of Arthur Hill Pool can be found in “The Arthur Hill Memorial Baths 1911-2011: A Centenary Memoir” by Philip Vaughan.  A copy is available in Reading Central Library.

 

 

About Arthur Hill

Memorial Baths

Arthur Hill - Former Mayor of Reading (Photo: Reading Museum)

The land for the Pool was donated for use by the people of Reading by Mr Hill's son in law - Dr Jamieson B Hurry. - Image from the History of Medicine.

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