"Peerless Pool"@de . . . . . . "The Perilous Pond, sometimes spelt Perelous, was an ancient pond fed by a spring in London located near the junction of modern-day Old Street and City Road. It gained its name from many tragic drownings there of people using it as a swimming hole. It was also used by fishermen and wildfowlers . From 1790 there was also a small library and a bowling green attached. William Hone , the satirist, visited the pool in 1826 and described it thus:- The pool was closed in 1850 and built over. Its gives its name to the nearby Peerless Street and Bath Street and obliquely to the Old Fountain public house."@en . "Der Peerless Pool war das erste \u00F6ffentliche Schwimmbad in London. Es befand sich im heutigen London Borough of Islington und war von 1743 bis 1850 in Betrieb."@de . . "1083506252"^^ . . "The Perilous Pond, sometimes spelt Perelous, was an ancient pond fed by a spring in London located near the junction of modern-day Old Street and City Road. It gained its name from many tragic drownings there of people using it as a swimming hole. It was also used by fishermen and wildfowlers . In 1743 the pond was purchased by William Kemp, a jeweller, who developed it by enclosing it in stone edging and adding marble steps and a gravel bottom. He built a separate pond for fishing and renamed the site the more enticing Peerless Pool. The grounds were screened by trees and the pool was used as an ice rink in winter. Kemp imposed an annual admission charge of \u00A31 10s. (or 1s. for day visitors).The pool was 170 ft long x 108 ft wide and from 3\u20135 feet deep. It was London's first outdoor public swimming pool. From 1790 there was also a small library and a bowling green attached. Around 1805, the lease was acquired by Joseph Watts, who drained the fish pond and constructed Baldwin Street on that part of the site. The business provided the family with a comfortable living. Richard Garnett mentions that his colleague (1811-1869), \"keeper of printed books at the British Museum\" (i.e. what would now be a senior position at the British Library), had his education paid for by the profits from the family business. William Hone , the satirist, visited the pool in 1826 and described it thus:- \u201CTrees enough remain to shade the visitor from the heat of the sun on the brink. On a summer evening it is amusing to survey the conduct of the bathers; some boldly dive, others timorous stand and then descend step by step, unwilling and slow; choice swimmers attract attention by divings and somersets, and the whole sheet of water sometimes rings with merriment. Every fine Thursday and Saturday afternoon in the summer columns of Bluecoat boys, more than a score in each, headed by their respective beadles, arrive and some half strip themselves \u2018ere they reach their destination. The rapid plunges they make into the Pool and their hilarity in the bath testify their enjoyment of the tepid fluid.\u201D The pool was closed in 1850 and built over. Its gives its name to the nearby Peerless Street and Bath Street and obliquely to the Old Fountain public house."@en . . "3823"^^ . . . . "Perilous Pond"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "49230406"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Der Peerless Pool war das erste \u00F6ffentliche Schwimmbad in London. Es befand sich im heutigen London Borough of Islington und war von 1743 bis 1850 in Betrieb."@de . . . . . .