Group at North End Municipal Swimming Pool
Item Information
- Title:
- Group at North End Municipal Swimming Pool
- Description:
-
This lantern slide shows over fifty boys wearing swimwear in front of a building near Lake Massasoit (also known as Watershops Pond). Some of the boys are on top of the roof of the building.
- Date:
-
[1905?–1910?]
- Format:
-
Photographs
- Location:
- Springfield College Archives and Special Collections
- Collection (local):
-
College Archives Digital Collections
- Series:
- Lantern Slide Collection
- Subjects:
-
Lake Massasoit
Springfield (Mass.)
Swimmers
Children
Group portraits
- Places:
-
Massachusetts > Hampden (county) > Springfield
- Extent:
- 3x4 in
- Link to Item:
- https://cdm16122.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15370coll2/id/3699
- Terms of Use:
-
Text and images are owned, held, or licensed by Springfield College and are available for personal, non-commercial, and educational use, provided that ownership is properly cited. A credit line is required and should read: Courtesy of Springfield College, Babson Library, Archives and Special Collections. Any commercial use without written permission from Springfield College is strictly prohibited. Other individuals or entities other than, and in addition to, Springfield College may also own copyrights and other propriety rights. The publishing, exhibiting, or broadcasting party assumes all responsibility for clearing reproduction rights and for any infringement of United States copyright law.
Contact host institution for more information.
- Publisher:
-
Springfield College
- Notes:
-
Lake Massasoit was used as a public swimming area for residents of Springfield. In “Boating Rules” (c. 1904), J. H. McCurdy writes, “The entire portion of the Pond east of New England R. R. Bridge can be used by the public at all hours on Sundays and legal Public Holidays, and on other days only between 5 P.M. and 8 A.M.” Lake Massasoit was formed when the Armory, now a National Historic Site, dammed Mill River to generate energy. On the shore of Lake Massasoit, the City of Springfield built two bath houses. The surrounding community used these until 1920, when the structures were destroyed to create space for a Springfield Ice Co. building. It is unclear whether the city replaced them, although they initially said this was their intention. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, townships began building public baths to improve the health and sanitary condition of the public. They were typically built along rivers, lakes, or oceans, and followed the same general layout: one women’s dressing room and one men’s dressing room, both separated by restrooms and an area for towel and swimwear rental. This was at a time when most people lacked indoor plumbing, and with the advent of germ theory, bath houses became popular locales.
Text on border reads, "Group at North End. Municipal Swimming Pool."
- Identifier:
-
LS-03-40