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Home > Ocean Baths > Black Head  Rock Pool
 

Name: Black Head Rock Pool

A main pool plus a children's pool located at the southern end of Black Head Beach near the Black Head surf club and Black Head village, one of the four settlements that make up Hallidays Point. Entry to this combination children's pool and training pool is pool is free, but the Black Head Pool Maintenance Committee accepts donations.

(Image taken on 14 September 2003.)
images/89_blackhead_beach.jpg
click for larger view
Location: Hallidays Point Road, Hallidays Point, NSW, 2430, Australia
(Latitude South 30d 04m 14s, Longitude East 153d 32m 45s)
Greater Taree > North Coast
Access to toilet/change facilities
Actively maintained
Disabled Access
Men
Women
Children
 
Current Use: Ocean baths.
Condition: Good, includes children's pool. Well maintained.

1935
When the Black Head surf club complained about the condition of the creek for bathers, the Manning Shire Council stated it had 'no funds to experiment in attempting to improve the present position'.

1937
The Manning Shire engineer submitted three tentative schemes for a rock pool at Black Head to the NSW government.

1938
The NSW Minister for Works and Local Government offered a maximum of 50% assistance with the proposed rock pool at Black Head. Manning Shire informed Black Head surf club that the Shire Engineer would prepare plans and specifications for a pool to cost no more than 500 pounds.

1939
After Manning Shire had adopted its engineer's plans for the rock pool, the NSW Department of Works and Local Government asked for amendments. Council stood by its plan and asked the Department to make a further inspection of the site. By November, the Manning Shire submitted revised plans which met the Department's suggestions, but kept the original length of 100 feet and a width of 30 feet.

1940
In July, the plans for the pool were still under review. In August, Mr M. Milligan's tender was accepted for the construction of a pool 100 feet by 30 feet that would be three foot six inches at its shallowest, have  a maximum depth of six foot and a separate pool for young children.

By October, excavation was practically complete and concreting of the walls had commenced, Black Head surf club organised the program for the pool's opening carnival on Boxing Day. Carnival takings based on charges of one shilling per head for persons over 14 were to be split between the club and the Council. The carnival to open the 'not quite complete' pool attracted competitors from the Black Head, Taree Old Bar and Tuncurry surf clubs, as well as boys and girls. Afternoon tea was provided at the Black Head Ladies' Surf Club. Councillor Milligan, the President of the Manning Shire, performed the opening ceremony. Except on special days, there would be no charges to use 'one of the best baths on the coast'.

1941
The pool was proving a great boon to Black Head's visitors. The Manning Shire Engineer was instructed to concrete the whole of the bottom of the baths and Manning Shire asked Black Head surf club for a further contribution to the pool. It was also popular with schools. The Wallamba P & C Association used the pool for a swimming carnival.

1945
The surf club and other volunteers modified and cleaned the pool and its surrounds.  In the last years of the war, the pool had been neglected to the point where it functioned more as a lobster pen than as a swimming space.

1950s
The Black Head surf club website shows activity at the pool in these years. The surf club appointed a resident of Black Head to keep the baths clean and made arrangements about a ladder and a railing for the pool.

1988
A group of volunteers known as 'Dad's Army' began to clean and maintain the pool. The pool was regularly closed and emptied for cleaning.

1995
The Hallidays Point development strategy noted that the Black Head pool needed upgrading.

2004
A new Hallidays Point development strategy was being developed. As the Black Head pool and the Black Head surf club's clubhouse are among the most 'loved' facilities in the area, the strategy proposed that they be maintained and enhanced by remedial work and provision of shade for the pool, extra parking places, bike racks and a link to a cycleway.

2005
Greater Taree Council reconstructed the wall between the main pool and the wading pool and recapped the pool walls. As part of the community effort to raise the estimated  $30,000 to $50,000 needed for repairs to the pool, the Hallidays Point Tidy Towns group published and marketed a booklet of photos of the pool.

Located midway between Taree and Forster, Hallidays Point is associated with the Biripi people. Significant Aboriginal sites exist at Black Head Reserve and the Black Head Lagoon Reserve.

Throughout the twentieth century, people from Taree, Wingham and Nabiac holidayed, fished and surfed at Black Head Beach. By 1915, so many people were surfing there, that a home-made surf reel was placed on Black Head Beach.

1920s
The older Norfolk Pines along the beachfront were planted. In 1924, the Black Head surf club formed to provide safety for the surfers, swimmers and families at Black Head Beach. Black Head's shark tower was erected with the help of a team of bullocks.

1930
The Black Head Ladies Surf Club was competing with the Ladies Old Bar Surf Club.

1946
The younger Norfolk Pines along the beachfront were planted.

1960s
Pollution from septic systems meant Black Head lagoon was no longer a safe or a pleasant swimming place for children.

Late 1980s
A sewage scheme designed to cater for the area until 2011 dramatically improved the water quality of the lagoon.

2003
Black Head Beach won the inaugural Australian Clean Beach Challenge and the title of 'Australia's Friendliest Beach'.

To be added.

Ocean baths developed during WWII to meet the needs of life savers, holiday makers and weekend beachgoers, rather than local residents. Associated with both men's and women's surf clubs.

Assessed significance: Local.
Current heritage status: To be advised.
 

Related Topics
Campers & caravanners
Smoking
Surf clubs
Studies/References
To be added.
 
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