Hello and welcome to my blog! If you love swimming in unique pools with stories to tell, you’re in the right place! Who said history has to be boring? Every time I immerse myself in historic waters, I feel a kinship with those who came before, as if I’ve dived back in time and am swimming among them. A sense of gratitude washes over me, that these special places exist.

I close my eyes and remember a few…

Rippled sunlight illuminating bright Catalina tiles in Marilyn Monroe’s favorite pool. Black lines stretching to what seems like eternity in a behemoth of a basin created by the US Army Corp of Engineers. White Roman statues overlooking an expanse of vibrant blue under Florida’s morning sun. A poolside glass of champagne (a toast to finishing a challenge) where luxury once hid government secrets. I could go on, but that’s for the blog! 

Those are the intangibles. Then, as with all projects, there are the specifics.

Through the years, I’ve had considerable difficulty finding information about historic pools. While websites generally provide basic details like operating hours, I’ve often spent hours online perusing pool pics, researching dates of construction, types of architecture, and, of course, dimensions. We swimmers need to know how long the pool is, right? Unless the pool is a standard size, like 25m or even 25y, frequently the answer from pool attendants or front desk hotel people is “I don’t know.” And we need to know! Sure, we can count strokes and guesstimate, but I want the actual measured dimensions so badly that I’ve been known to count pool tiles and heel-to-toe steps to find my answers.

And that, my swimmy friends, is my purpose. With you, I want to share the knowledge I’ve gathered over the years, but more than that, I want to share my joy and fascination with these incredible and sometimes under-appreciated pools. Hopefully I will inspire you to love them as I do and to support their continued existence for future generations of swimmers.

If you would like your pool profiled here, or if you’re curious about one, please message me. I am always pondering which aquatic facility I want to visit next! Moreover, I may already have the information you seek! In my journals, I have logged swims in more than twenty historic pools, so if your pool is one of those, I can just write it up and post! 

Happy historic swimming, everyone! 

Swimmers set…

And GO! 

12 responses to “Warm-up Time!”

  1. Awesome, Reva -I look forward to reading your articles!

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    1. Hi Ian! Thanks so much! I look forward to posting! New entry on the Greenbrier went up today!

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  2. Very interesting! Looking forward to more stories

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    1. Glad you like it! Thank you so much for reading and commenting! New post on the Greenbrier went up today!

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  3. Love your stories and look forward to updates through 2024. Hi from Brisbane, Australia. I am currently sharing 30 swims in 30 days on my Facebook page. On Day #3 and I’m sure my Facebook friends are already bored by daily postings. But I am going to persist – my Facebook posts are my accountability mechanism 🙂

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    1. Thanks so much for reading and commenting! What you’re doing is so cool!!! I’d love to follow your progress! Keep up the good work!

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  4. oceanna 🌊 Avatar
    oceanna 🌊

    Need someone to carry your suitcase? 🙂 What a wonderful goal. I’m in Canada and know of a few in Montreal if you need more travel ideas. Since joining ‘Did you swim today?’ I’ve become curious about architects that design pools – is that a specialized discipline in schools? Who are these people who love to design pools? I’m looking forward to ooohing and ahhhing (drooling) over your posts and dreaming about following your trail.

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    1. Hi Oceanna! I thought I had replied to your kind comment right after you posted it, but I don’t see my reply! So sorry! Sometimes technology vexes me. Anyway, thank you so much for reading my blog and then taking the time to respond with such enthusiasm! We are taking our annual trip to Northern Ontario this summer, and I’d love to scoot over to Montreal again. If not this year, then we’ll do it in 2025! Such a great city.

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  5. My favorite pool is the one with the white Roman statues, and I would love to visit it. Thank you for sharing.

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    1. The Biltmore Coral Gables is just gorgeous! I’ll be posting about that one soon! It’s fully written and just needs photos!

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  6. Patrick Brundage Avatar

    I am so glad to have come across your site! I’ll start diving into the pools you’ve profiled thus far. I’m clearly going for a “high volume” approach with my 1001 Pools quest, whereas you’ve got a “high quality” approach. I love it.

    If you ever get out to Berkeley California, two pools I highly recommend you stay at the Berkeley City Club (to gain access to their pool) and then swim at the Hearst North Pool on the Cal-Berkeley campus. (I wrote about these https://www.1001pools.com/single-post/2016/09/29/pool-crushes-julia-morgans-berkeley-beauties).

    Oh … and I know the Toronto Pan Am pool wasn’t yet historic in 2015, but I got to see Summer McIntosh beat Katie Ledecky in the 400M free there at the World Cup in 2022, setting a junior world record in the process. Summer also set the junior world record in the 400 IM at the same event. So, at least for us Canadians, we think it’s already now building up some good history!!

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    1. Hi Patrick! Your blog is a great reference, and I’m glad you discovered mine as well! Thanks for the Berkeley recommendations! We are actually headed there this summer for a conference, so I’ll definitely grab the opportunity to swim in those pools!
      Love the Toronto PanAm Pool! What a great venue! So cool that you got to see those races! With half our family in Ontario, we travel to Toronto every summer, and I do plan on writing a blog entry about that pool. History in the making!
      Cheers!

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