Crystal Pool (Seattle)
Crystal Pool Natatorium was a saltwater indoor swimming pool in Seattle, Washington. It was eventually adapted and became the building of the Bethel Temple Pentecostal Church. It was designed by B. Marcus Priteca and built from 1915 to 1918. The pool was covered with boards and the venue used for boxing or roller skating.
The building was later demolished in 2003 and replaced with a condominium complex called Crystalla.
Description
The complex was designed for C. D. Stimson by Marcus Priteca. Upon its debut, the Italian Renaissance architecture facility was described as having outdone the Baths of Rome. The total cost of its construction was approximately $200,000.It had arched steel trusses and a glass roof. Its facade included terracotta features and it had a dome. Water was pumped in from the Puget Sound's Elliott Bay. The 260,000 gallon pool was heated. It was in the Belltown District.
History
In 1918, the pool's adjoining energy plant was converted from burning oil to burning a form of powdered coal. A contemporaneous article in Electrical World magazine reported that it was to become the first of its kind to transition to powdered coal. It received the coal by truck, and was described as not having a "slag pit" for its byproducts.In February 1923, the Young Men's Republican Club of King County organized a Lincoln Banquet at the Crystal Pool Auditorium. In March 23, 1923, the Ku Klux Klan held a rally at the venue. At the time, Seattle was segregated with covenants to restrict where minorities could live and sundown restrictions kept them out of white neighborhoods after working hours. The Klan event was one of several held around Washington in 1923 and 1924.
Crystal Pool swimming team
Hall of Fame Coach Ray Daughters assumed the role of Head Swimming coach for the Crystal Pool team in 1924, succeeding Coach Don Vickers, who had been Head Coach when Crystal Pool first opened in 1916. Daughters had begun work as a swimming instructor and clerk at Crystal Pool in 1916. Between 1919-1923, Vickers's and Daughters's Crystal Swimming Club won the Pacific Northwest Championship meet consecutively by considerable margins, and had many outstanding swimmers and divers. Daughters, who was an exceptional eye for spotting latent swimming talent, first discovered and began training a fourteen year-old Helene Madison around 1927, in his earliest years as Head swim coach at Crystal Pools. By 1934, Helene Madison would hold 51 of 62 American freestyle records, and 12 of 16 freestyle world records, and had won three Olympic Gold medals in the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics. 1936 Berlin Olympic bronze medalist Olive McKean was another Olympian who began her career being coached by Daughters and Vickers at Crystal Pool.In 1924, U. S. Navy swimmers from the battleships and competed at the pool.
William H. Offler bought the building in 1944 and converted it into Bethel Temple, permanently covering the pool with flooring. The entrance was on the corner of 2nd Avenue and Lenora Street.