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English: Free vector map of Canberra, Australia, Level 12 (5000 m scale), printable and editable vector map of Canberra. Date: 4 December 2016: Source
The establishment was originally government-owned and known as "Macquarie Swimming pool", also often referred to as "Jammo Pool". The slides were introduced in the early 1980s. During the 1990s the pool was sold to the Watkins family. The current name for the facility is "Big Splash Waterpark".
The Bogey Hole recalls the early period of military privilege and convict servitude. In the 1850s it was a venue of segregated bathing. (The Ladies' Bathing Place was at the south end of Newcastle Beach.) Swimming at the Bogey Hole features in Audley Reay's "Memories of the Hunter and Newcastle in the 1880s".
Bogey Hole in Newcastle. Ocean pools date back to the convict era in Australia with Newcastle's Bogey Hole being constructed in 1819 by convicts under the orders of Commandant James Morisset. [1] Construction of ocean pools was generally through community subscriptions or government funded.
Calthorpes' Canberra: The town and community in 1927. Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, Australia. ISBN 0-644-04662-7. Huggus, compiled on behalf of Clive Harvie (c. 1994). That's where I met my wife : a story of the first swimming pool in the National Capital at Canberra. C. Harvie, Canberra, Australia. (no ISBN).
Canberra International Sports and Aquatic Centre (CISAC) is a privately owned sport centre located in Bruce, a suburb of Canberra, Australia. CISAC is home to the CISAC swim academy and the Ginninderra Marlins swimming club. CISAC is one of the largest multi-tenancy health and leisure facilities in Australia.
Commonwealth Park is in Canberra, Australia, adjacent to the north side of Lake Burley Griffin. Centrally located in the city, it is an important part of the urban landscape. Centrally located in the city, it is an important part of the urban landscape.
Manuka Swimming Pool 1930 Griffith: The pool was an important social hub for early Canberra from 1930 until the 1960s. It is built in the Federal Capital Style. Open to the public, admission charge. ACT Heritage Register Kingston Powerhouse: 1915 Kingston: The powerhouse was the first permanent public building in the ACT.