|
Royal Pump Rooms and Baths
The early years
The Royal Pump Room and Baths was originally built in 1813 by Charles S
Smith at a cost of nearly £25,000, opposite Jephson Gardens. Though profitable when first built, by 1848 the fashion of
'taking the waters' had begun to decline and in 1860 the then owner, the
Hon Charles Bertie Percy, put the Pump Rooms up for sale.
On
12 September 1861, the Leamington Royal Pump Room Company
Limited was formed with a nominal capital of £8,500 divided into 1700 shares of £5 each.
The new company took over,
this extensive property, with the spacious grounds at the
back,…not as a pecuniary speculation, but in order to give greater publicity to the healing virtues of the Leamington waters, and to afford greater facilities to invalids for testing their
efficacy.
After
extensive construction work, the building was re-opened in 1863 and in
addition to the 'greater facilities' for imbibing the healing waters,
there were now Turkish Baths as well as hot, tepid, cold, douche, plunge, shower and swimming baths.
The
new Turkish baths
The
Turkish baths suite comprised an apodyterium (changing room),
labrum
(washing room), caldarium (very hot room), tepidarium (warm room), and frigidarium (cooling-room). The hot and warm rooms were square, with barrel vaulted roofs,
while the cooling-room boasted a dome and pointed horseshoe arches with
stained-glass windows. Here, bathers would relax and drink tea after going through the hot
rooms.
Five
years later, in 1868, the company, under the chairmanship of John
Haddon, sold the land and buildings to the Town for £15,000 with no
outstanding debts and with all surplus moneys distributed to the
shareholders. These 127 shareholders, holding 1647 shares between
them, had retained their investment during most of the
company's life.
The
management of the baths was now undertaken by a committee of the Local Board
of Health under a Special Act of Parliament.
George
Elson's time at the Turkish baths
When
George Elson and his wife were appointed to run the Turkish baths in 1875,
they were used by not more than a dozen or so bathers per week. Under
the Elsons the numbers soon built up to between fifty and sixty each
week. Elson was extremely popular and well-respected, and was clearly in
control if ever discussions threatened to get out of hand.
One
night, while sitting in a hot room registering a hundred and sixty
degrees of heat, two bathers commenced discussing that much debated
question—the 'Tichborne Claimant.'
Both
being well posted upon every tittle of evidence which supported their
side, not a moment was lost, as at it they went hammer and tongs,
neither allowing the other to finish a sentence, and in their vehemence
perspiring profusely all the while, and all the more by reason of their
excited arguments, till half an hour, then three-quarters passed by, and
as neither appeared on the point of giving in, but rather were waxing
hotter and hotter in their arguments and temperature, feeling their
health was likely to suffer, I was obliged to request, and then to
insist, on one of them coming to be shampooed, and very reluctantly one
gave way.
The
clientele at the Leamington Turkish at that time often travelled from as
far afield as
Banbury, Rugby, Coventry, and Stratford-on-Avon. They came from a
variety of occupations and were by no means all of one class including,
as they did, 'some few noble lords, many squires, numbers of
professional men, military and naval, athletes and jockeys, and a few
doctors.' Elson proudly mentions Fred Archer the jockey, Richard Proctor
the astronomer, and the comedian J L Toole among the famous persons he
looked after and shampooed.
Into
the twentieth century
A larger pool was added
in 1889 and it remained the town's public swimming pool for 100 years until 1989.
There was another extensive refurbishment in 1926 which this time
included the Turkish baths. Three hot rooms could be kept at temperatures of 120°F,
150°F
and 210°F, the
ducted air being first
heated by a coke-fired hot air furnace. Stale air was carried from the
rooms through floor level grilles thereby ensuring that there were five
complete change of air every hour.
The hot
rooms and complementary Russian steam bath were, according to a
contemporary guide, 'luxuriously fitted up' with the result that
they would 'compare favourably with any in the
kingdom.' Such luxury was not expensive, tickets for Turkish Baths with shampoo
costing 24/- for a book of twelve during the early 1930s.
Closure,
and after
During
the 1970s, the Turkish bath,
began to lose more and more money and various weekday
services were cut, more seasonal services were introduced, and eventually in
c.1977 [it] was shut to the public.
The
remainder of the baths complex closed a decade or so later in 1989. By
the mid 90s the Turkish baths suite, closed now for about twenty years,
was in a bad state of repair. Parts were in such bad condition that
demolition appeared to be the only solution. Fortunately, however, when
a new museum and library complex was planned for the site, it appeared
feasible to retain the structure of the cooling-room. This has now been
beautifully restored, as closely as possible to the original
design.
 |
|
Gary
Archer, Leamington Spa Library Service, for help in locating
information sources;
I am especially grateful to David Howells,
Curatorial Officer (Social History) at the Art Gallery and Museum, The
Royal Pump Rooms, for information and images. |
The original page
includes footnotes, and thumbnail pictures which can be enlarged. All the enlarged images, listed and linked below, can also be printed.
Leamington's
Royal Pump house
and Baths in the 1920s
A
corner
of the domed frigidarium
A
Part of the cooling-room in the mid 1970s
Outside the frigidarium
The
Restaurant in the restored frigidarium
Underside of
the dome in the frigidarium
A
corner Cleaned up tiles in a floor at Leamington Turkish baths
Before
and after :the frigidarium
Top of the page
|