MAKE A MEME View Large Image Champ Swimmer, thought to be at a local Tarboro swimming pool, May 1939. Taken by Baker, NC Conservation and Development Department, Travel and Tourism photo files, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, NC. We need your help! Is this ...
View Original:ConDev2017C.jpg (277x360)
Download: Original    Medium    Small Thumb
Courtesy of:www.flickr.com More Like This
Keywords: tarboro (n.c) tarboronc swimming pools swimmingpools carolyn perrest carolynperrest blackandwhite monochrome outdoor black and white Carolyn Perrest [?] Tarboro, NC, Champ Swimmer, thought to be at a local Tarboro swimming pool, May 1939. Taken by Baker, NC Conservation and Development Department, Travel and Tourism photo files, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, NC. We need your help! Is this swimming pool the famous Tarboro "Cool Pool"? From the NCPedia ncpedia.org/cool-pool: On 9 July 1933 the Tarboro Town Council voted to ask Frick and Company of Waynesboro, Pa., to design and install a refrigerating unit for its new municipal swimming pool. After operating for only three months, the olympic-design pool, containing 300,000 gallons of water and with a constant flow of 400 gallons per minute, had become uncomfortably warm from the summer's record heat and the activity of swimmers. By mid-August Frick had installed the refrigerating device at a cost of $2,592, making the Tarboro pool what is believed to have been the first and perhaps only refrigerated outdoor pool in the country. Tarboro's "cool pool" drew crowds of swimmers and swimming meets throughout the 1930s. Carolyn Perrest [?] Tarboro, NC, Champ Swimmer, thought to be at a local Tarboro swimming pool, May 1939. Taken by Baker, NC Conservation and Development Department, Travel and Tourism photo files, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, NC. We need your help! Is this swimming pool the famous Tarboro "Cool Pool"? From the NCPedia ncpedia.org/cool-pool: On 9 July 1933 the Tarboro Town Council voted to ask Frick and Company of Waynesboro, Pa., to design and install a refrigerating unit for its new municipal swimming pool. After operating for only three months, the olympic-design pool, containing 300,000 gallons of water and with a constant flow of 400 gallons per minute, had become uncomfortably warm from the summer's record heat and the activity of swimmers. By mid-August Frick had installed the refrigerating device at a cost of $2,592, making the Tarboro pool what is believed to have been the first and perhaps only refrigerated outdoor pool in the country. Tarboro's "cool pool" drew crowds of swimmers and swimming meets throughout the 1930s.
Terms of Use   Search of the Day