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Name: Little Bay Rock Pool
(Little Bay Baths)
| A ring-of-rocks pool constructed with beach rocks on
the south tip of Little Bay in the grounds of the Prince Henry Hospital,
ANZAC Parade, Little Bay. Sited below the Coast Chapel, the
Interdenominational Australian Nurses' War Memorial chapel. Access
across the golf course. 'Little Bay and Baths' appeared on an early
twentieth-century postcard.
(Image taken 27 July 2004.) |

click for larger view |
Location: Coast Hospital Road, Little Bay, NSW,
2036, Australia
(Latitude South 33d 58m 48s, Longitude East 151d 15m 08s)
Randwick >
Sydney - Eastern Suburbs |
 
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Early 1900s
Onsite recreation was important for the hospital's nurses, as the nearest public
transport was the steam tram to the suburb of Botany, four miles away. Nurses
paddled, swam and sunbaked at the beach at Little Bay, where a bathing shed was
erected. The hospital had around 65 nurses and a total staff of around 80.
As sharks had been seen in Little Bay, Matron Jean McMaster forbade the nurses
to swim in the Bay. Even so, nurses continued to swim there and often swam at
night. There were no shark fatalities.
Matron McMaster requested better facilities for the nurses including a nurses'
home, a nurses' sitting room and even hot water for the nurses' bathroom, along
with recreational facilities such as a fully equipped tennis court and a rock-enclosed pool in Little Bay. It was years before the rock pool was completed.
1905
By the time Alice Watson became Matron at the Coast Hospital, the rock pool in
Little Bay had been constructed as a 'safe' swimming pool for nurses.
1917
Photos show nurses and convalescent patients in army uniforms on Little Bay
Beach in front of the rock pool.
1920s
Photos show nurses on Little Bay Beach in swimming costumes and picnicking in
front of the rock pool. Children played on the beach in the care of nurses.
1950s
Nurses at the hospital still paddled and swam at the Little Bay Beach and in the
rock pool. Prospective nurses were advised of the swimming from the hospital
beach and other onsite recreational amenities provided free to the nursing staff, including competition-standard tennis courts, a 9-hole golf course, a library
and film programs.
Late 1960s
The view across Little Bay from the pool changed when environmental artists
Christo and Jeanne-Claude turned Little Bay into a sculpture, Wrapped Coast,
Little Bay, One Million Square Feet, Sydney, by using a million square feet of
erosion control fabric to wrap a section of the cliff-lined shore opposite the
rock pool. A team of professional mountain climbers, labourers, students from
the University of Sydney and East Sydney Technical College and Australian
artists and teachers worked on the project. The coast remained wrapped for some
weeks, before the site was returned to its original condition and the materials
recycled.
1970s
Effluent from the Malabar sewage outfall to the north made the Little Bay
beach and rock pool too polluted for swimming. Prince Henry Hospital nurses held
dances, raffles and barbecues to raise money for an off-beach swimming pool
built at no cost to the Hospital.
1988
The NSW Minister for Health, Peter Collins, announced that the Prince Henry
Hospital would close, its facilities would be relocated to the Prince of Wales
Hospital at Randwick and the state-owned land at the Prince Henry Hospital site
would be sold. The NSW National Trust inspected and classified the hospital and
its site and recommended a National Heritage listing.
1990s
Construction of a deep-ocean outfall at Malabar ended pollution of the Little
Bay Beach and rock pool. Local residents could walk to the pool across the Coast
Hospital's golf course.
2000
As the Prince Henry Hospital site was known to have significant heritage
relating to both Aboriginal and European use of the site, Landcom (the NSW State
Government's land development agency) commissioned a Due Diligence report on
associated heritage issues before purchasing the site. The report recommended
establishment of a heritage precinct.
2002
Development of a Conservation Management Plan for the site.
2003
Amendments to the Conservation Management Plan for the Prince Henry
Hospital site recognised it as a place of Statewide heritage significance. The
masterplan for the site was approved by both Randwick Council and the Heritage
Council. Landcom arranged for archival recording of the Prince Henry Hospital site.
2005
The rock pool is still useable. The Prince Henry Hospital site was redeveloped
by the NSW government's Landcom in partnership with the developer Stockland to
provide 400 residential apartments and retail and commercial precincts. Eighty
per cent of the site will remain in public ownership with remnant bushland, golf
courses and heritage buildings to be retained. Landcom plans to invest more than
$100 million into community facilities, restoration of nineteenth-century
heritage buildings and other site activities.
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The beach and headland at Little Bay contain important Aboriginal sites,
including middens dated prior to 1881.
1881
The Coast Hospital was established in response to an outbreak of smallpox in
Sydney. This Hospital was the first general hospital in NSW and the first
post-convict era public hospital in NSW. It specialised in the treatment of
infectious diseases as Little Bay, located some 14.5 kilometres (9 miles),
southeast of the centre of Sydney, was remote enough to serve as a suitable
quarantine site for Sydney victims of the plague, smallpox, typhoid, scarlet
fever and leprosy. Other patients were taken direct to the Hospital from the
Quarantine Station at North Head.
The hospital, set in spacious grounds near the sea, was a highly therapeutic
place for patients, who were undernourished or lived in overcrowded areas with
substandard housing, an unclean inadequate water supply and little or no
sanitation.
1897
Nurses at the Coast Hospital were granted 52 days of leave a year, consisting of
two days of leave a month and 28 days for annual leave. Nurses worked seven days
a week, often without receiving their designated two days off each month.
Early twentieth century
Little Bay became more accessible with the building of a tramline offering
direct access to the Coast Hospital by electric tram.
1934
The Coast Hospital was renamed as the Prince Henry Hospital.
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To be added.
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A ring-of-rocks bathing pool created from beach rocks in the early 1900s to
provide safe shark-free bathing for nurses at Sydney's Coast Hospital that
remained popular with the hospital nurses into the 1960s. Only instance of an
ocean baths created to provide safe bathing for nurses or so closely associated
with a hospital.
Assessed significance: Local significance.
Current heritage status: Was given a heritage listing by the Department
of Health, then responsible for the Prince Henry Hospital site.
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< Next pool south = Cronulla - Northernmost Pool :
: Next pool north = Malabar Rock Pool >
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