Liverpool City Council decided to close down Woolton Baths in October 2010, due to maintenance costs.
They maintain the total cost for the work required amounts to around £120,000.
Following months of negotiations, the council finally agreed, in 2013, to lease the baths for 12
months to the Woolton Village Residents Company, alongside Save Woolton Pool Fund, to enable them
access and allow them to begin renovations and repairs the building.
History
The baths were opened in 1893 and for over a century served the local community; previous users
include John Lennon, Paul McCartney and 2004 Olympic Bronze medallist Steve Parry. They were
provided by the wealthy Woolton resident and philanthropist, Holbrook Gaskell JP. In 1891, on the
condition that the local council would pay for the maintenance. Gaskell’s main objective was to ‘to
bring a sanitary institution within the reach and the means of the labouring classes of the village
and neighbourhood’ (Historic England) and to be available to either gender. Much Woolton local
council accepted Gaskell’s offer and Manchester Architects Horton and Bridgeforth were appointed the
architects, who had previously designed both Widnes Baths (1879) and the Grade II listed Victoria
Salt Water Baths (1871) in Southport. Historic England reported that ‘Like other swimming baths at
the time, the pool water at Woolton was only changed once a week, and therefore admissions were
charged accordingly, with the cheapest rate being at the end of the week when the water was the
dirtiest.’ In 1910, the decision was taken to floor over the pool in the winter months, when it was
too cold to open, which allowed the local community to use the building for events and meetings. In
1913, Much Woolton Parish was absorbed into Liverpool city council and so the responsibility for the
baths maintenance changed hands. More importantly, up until the baths closure in 2010, the pool was
predominantly the home to Woolton Swimming club, founded in 1893.
Today
Woolton Village Residents Company and Save Woolton Pool group have been holding fundraising events
and campaigning to re-open the pool and also create a local history and community centre for
residents and visitors. Their first major success came when the baths were designated Grade II
listed in 2012. The designation was due to architectural interest; ‘It displays a good level of
architectural detailing externally, most notably in the striking Baroque Revival entrance.
Image (pending permission) http://www.britishbeatlesfanclub.co.uk/2013/07/celebrating-120th-birthday-of-woolton.html