Manor Place Baths

From the archives, the first edition of our month of best of history posts

From Baths to Boxing to Buddhism

Victorians are well known for many things. We know they were sanctimonious and strived to make our minds pure, and the natural progression was to have clean bodies and clothes,  so for the health and hygiene of all the mortal bodies of Walworth, in 1895 work got underway to create Manor Place Baths. In addition to offering showers, it also had three swimming pools, private changing cubicles and large do it yourself laundry facilities. Think of it as kind of a Victorian water park.

Over the years the Baths became more of a community centre and also a place for people to obtain a bit of privacy in an era where privacy was at a premium. Women could trade children’s clothes, men could catch up in the men’s pool, and even children could come along. As the pools weren’t heated and our Greater Kennington forebears didn’t fancy losing their toes to frostbite, the men’s and women’s pools were covered over with wooden flooring in the wintertime, which gave said forebears a brilliant idea……Use it in the winter as a boxing venue. 

Manor Place saw its first bout in 1908 and went on to host a roll-call of the famous and infamous, including the Kray twins. It became so well known that when the BBC began to broadcast boxing they chose our little Baths as their first venue. For more than 40 years, The Metropolitan Borough of Southwark’s Charity Boxing Committee organised the bouts, which saw the cream of the boxing world come to Walworth, giving locals the chance to see top-flight, professional boxing on their own doorstep

Fast forward to the 1970’s. By then the now sadly extinct Heygate Estate had been built and most people had their own bathrooms. Domestic labour saving washing machines were now commonplace and those who didn’t found that newly opened laundrettes would do quite nicely. The final nail in coffin of Manor Place came when the new Elephant and Castle Leisure Centre opened in 1972, which put into sharp focus just how deteriorated and outdated Manor Place had become.

Later in life our Baths were used as offices for Southwark Council and later rented out by a Buddhist organisation for use as a meditation facility. It was purchased by Notting Hill Housing Trust in 2017 and it is currently being developed into market rate flats and ‘affordable’ housing. The reason this is taking so long is that the building is, thank baby Jesus, Grade II listed and Notting Hill have to be very careful as to how it is adapted. 

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6 thoughts on “Manor Place Baths

  1. Hi All

    Hope you can help or direct me to who can.

    My Dad has always told us how he boxed at Manor Place Baths for his school ‘Englist Mayters School when he was between 12-14, between 1960-62 but we have not been able to find anything in the history books. It would mean so much if we could find something in history that he could show his Grandkids since it was a proud mark in his early years, his name is John Beaumont.

    Thankyou in advance.

    Kind regards

    Paul

  2. I use to go and have baths ther when I was very young and ther was a laundry ther aswell and big green dryer s that pulled out from the wall beautiful old tapes you payed . They pull a lever outside to fill the bath with hot water fabulous. And I went swimming there with my school crampton street school it’s still ther .

  3. I used to swim for Southwark Swimming Club there. Great place. Changing rooms around the outside of the pool. I learned to dive in Small Pool, I came second in Southwark for diving. Lots of good memories.

  4. We lived in Thrush Street and went round the corner to Manor place to Bath and swim and do the washing. No hot water in our flat but a great place to grow up. Learnt to swim at Crampton with the dinner ladies doubling up as swimming teachers pulling us around the pool by a hoop on a pole. Still go back to Pullens every year for a wander round the area.

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