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Name: Bulli Baths
Rectangular main pool with an attached children's pool. Close to
the surf club. View of the Woonona Baths to the south.
This pool featured on early twentieth-century postcards.(Image taken on 11
August 2001.) |

click for larger view |
Location: Trinity Row, Bulli, NSW, 2516,
Australia
(Latitude South 34d 20m 23s, Longitude East 150d 55m 35s)
Wollongong >
Illawarra |
 
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1894
A meeting at Dickson's Hotel at Bulli sought funds to construct suitable baths
for Bulli and Woonona and the local MP suggested applying for a lease of the
foreshore. The enthusiastic meeting decided to form a swimming club and school
clubs after the baths were erected.
1897
A sub-committee of the Bulli Progress Association meeting at Dickson's Hotel
sought funds for public baths for Bulli through the efforts of friendly
societies, staging a concert on a grand scale, as well as soliciting for
subscriptions throughout the district.
1902
A total of 23 pounds was collected and 30 pounds subscribed at a meeting at
Stokes Hotel in Bulli about construction of the Bulli Baths at Floyds Rocks at Waniora
Point, 'where with little expense, nice baths can be erected close to all'.
By March 1902, 'the sea baths which Bulli was to have for this season and
for which some 10 pound was collected is still all to make'.
1903
Baths at Floyds Rocks, south of the present baths, were in use and 'crowded
nearly all day' on the Sunday in March, when a collection was taken up for a
bathing shed. Certain hours at the baths were set aside for ladies and others for gentlemen.
1905
Time-segregated bathing was still in force at the Bulli Baths.
1910
A gale washed away the change shed at the Bulli Baths.
1916
Work on the rock pool began. By November, the contractor Mr T. W. Evans had finished
enlarging the Bulli Baths. The Bulli Surf Bathers and Life Saving Club was
praised for the way it had worked to secure the money from an Easter Monday
carnival, members' subscriptions and donations, when other clubs had tried for
the previous four years to raise sufficient funds.
While the new baths were 35 yards long and considered 'as good as any outside of
the city', the surf club hoped to widen them if the support was forthcoming.
1921
Bulli Beach and its Baths were transformed thanks to the beach improvement committee. New
baths twice the size of the original were built adjoining the old baths.
1927
Electric light was installed and used at the baths.
A Sydney team gave a fine exhibition at a February Sunday carnival at the Bulli
Baths attended by 1,500 people.
1928
The Baths had been in excellent condition and much patronised during the
holidays. The annual meeting of the Bulli Progress Association entrusted its
secretary with attending to repairs, enlarging and cleaning of the Bulli Baths.
Bulli Shire Council agreed to supply Bulli Amateur Swimming Club with a medicine
chest and allowed the Club to have sole use of the baths for a carnival on Easter Monday.
That carnival included events for males and females as well as novelty events such as a barrel
race, egg and spoon race and tightrope walking.
The Bulli Amateur Swimming Club also wanted to extend the baths and enclose the
verandah on the lower part of the dressing sheds to form a club room. Council
allowed the Bulli Swimming Club to use timbers from the old dressing-shed at
Bulli Point to build seats around the baths and a club room and provide electric
light poles for night carnivals at the baths. Bulli Swimming Club supplied
Council with names of people to act as beach inspectors and argued that the
pavilion was dangerous and should be demolished.
Members of a Tramway Swimming Club competed with the Bulli club
at the Bulli Baths. The Bulli club's lady members put on a swimming exhibition,
the diving troupe performed and the Tramway team gave an exhibition of water-polo. Ignoring the history of water-polo at Kiama, the Illawarra Mercury,
referred to the water polo exhibition at Bulli as 'the first game played on the South Coast'.
In September 1928, the Bulli Progress Association asked Council to pay 10 pounds
to the Swimming Club for additions and repairs to the baths.
December 1928 saw another demonstration organised by the Bulli Amateur Swimming
Club, featuring the Bulli Diving troupe and exhibitions of diving and swimming by
the lady members.
1933
The Bulli Progress Association was suggesting Council increase the size of the
Bulli Baths.
1936
The Bulli Surf Club asked Council to budget for enlargement of the Bulli Baths,
which were patronised by 75% of the people who visited the beach. The headmaster
of the Bulli School also suggested improvements to the bath that would remove the
need to taken school children to Austinmer for swimming lessons. Council refused
the school's request for a subsidy to address the cost of transporting school
children to the baths.
1938
Bulli Council accepted a tender for 1,871 pounds 12 shillings and sixpence from a
Sydney firm to construct
the new Bulli Baths, an Olympic-sized pool with a children's pool. These new baths were
intended to add to the attraction of Bulli Beach and stimulate still-water swimming competitions.
A large crowd attended the opening of the 50-metre by 30-metre pool by Cr Thompson,
a man who
would have liked it made compulsory for every boy and girl to learn to swim. The
NSW ASA swimming stars at the opening carnival included four Empire Games
representatives, as well as the female state diving and junior breast stroke
champions. The carnival included an old buffers race, a schoolboys race and
music from the Wollongong Steelworks Band.
1939
The ramp leading to the baths was to be removed and an opening made in the north
end of the kiosk to give access to the ladies dressing shed. Construction
of a children's baths was 'to be proceeded with when conditions permit'.
1940
The Bulli Local Committee wanted the baths emptied and the sand and seaweed removed.
1942
No funds were available to clear a fair amount of seaweed from the Bulli Baths.
1945
The Bulli Local Committee wanted alterations to the valve at the Bulli Baths.
1955
Founding of the Bulli High School, which used the pool for school sports and
learn-to-swim classes.
Australian champion swimmer, Jon Henricks, swam in front of a
crowd of over a thousand people at a carnival at the Bulli baths. Henricks later
swam for Australia at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne.
1959
Formation of the Brass Monkeys winter swimming club.
1962
Winter swimming club renamed the Bulli Park Sea Lions.
1973
Wollongong Council's townplanner advised that development of the indoor pool
complex proposed by Bulli Surf Club was neither legal nor desirable and would
restrict access to the rock baths. Council assented to development of the project
which was later ruled out until changes were made to the Local Government Act to
permit surf clubs to build swimming pools as well as gymnasiums.
1982
Bulli Park Sea Lions winter swimming club admitted its first female members.
1993
A bike path behind the beach linked Bulli with Woonona Beach.
Late
1990s
The Bulli community demanded Council fix bad smells at the pool and address the
apparent lack of pool
maintenance. Pensioner Mal Roberts, who organised a 1,000-signature petition, said
he'd call in support from winter swimming groups and the schools, if Council
couldn't find the money to rectify the pool's problems. Residents petitioned
Wollongong Council until the problems were resolved to their satisfaction and using the 50-metre
pool was no longer 'like swimming in sewage' despite Council statements that the
pool was cleaned every three months. Locals worried about the impact the putrid pool
would have on tourism, as most of the people in Bulli's summer crowds were not
local residents.
Wollongong City Council agreed to spend up to $20,000 ridding Bulli Pool of
sludge by filling in the hole that had been collecting rubbish and polluting the
pool, and to consider a full $120,000 renovation of the pool in two years.
1999
Bulli's Olympic-size ocean pool remained an attraction for weekend visitors and
those not confident in the surf.
2003
The rock pool was an attraction for visitors to the area's B&Bs (Bed and
breakfast establishments), despite
local complaints that the main pool was full of algae and slime and the
toddlers pool was full of sand.
2004
The toddlers pool was free of the sand that had made it unusable.
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Nineteenth century
Bulli was a coal-mining area, 'Black Diamond' country. The panoramic view from
the top of the Bulli Pass attracted tourists.
1906
Bulli Shire Council was formed.
1938
Bulli Shire was close to achieving its stated desire of having baths
along the coast from Woonona to Clifton and was spending 1,000 pounds a year on
baths.
1947
The Bulli Shire Council was amalgamated with other Illawarra councils to form the
City of Greater Wollongong.
1999
The council-run caravan park on Bulli Beach mainly attracted tourists from
western and southern Sydney, with its 160 permanent sites for regular weekend
visitors and 120 tourist sites that filled quickly each school holidays.
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To be added.
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The Bulli Baths are historically significant because they demonstrate the
evolution of simple pools on rock platforms into formalised ocean baths, offering
time-segregated bathing for males and females into a 50-metre sport and recreation
facility complete with wading pool.
The development of this site coincided with the growth of amateur swimming, the
pursuit of aquatic sports, the move to mixed bathing on beaches and baths and
the use of ocean pools as training facilities for lifesavers and others and
acceptance of the 50 metre Olympic pool as the desirable competition/training pool.
Assessed significance: Local.
Current heritage status: Not yet given heritage status.
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  <
Next pool south = Collins Point Baths :
: Next pool north = Old Thirroul Baths - McAuleys Rocks>
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