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John Hancock's avatar

My dad, in our tiny Iowa town ~1965, helped Pleasantville plan and raise money for a city pool. Farm towns were hot and dusty. What better way for kids and families to find some relief, with far greater safety and sobriety than the off-limits gravel pit. Audacious: $350,000, in a town of 1,000 people. The fund drive, which I remember clearly from the big thermometer illustration in the town square, stalled at around 2/3. Dad reluctantly endorsed the alternate solution: a members-only "country club" of pool, bar, and 9-hole golf course, at the edge of town, on land donated by a farmer. I was too young to know the membership complexities, but the pool was available to non-members on certain days, and I expect that he had a hand in designing the sliding-scale membership fees. My brother and I were founding members of the high school golf team, but the pool mattered far more. Red Cross and Boy Scout lifeguard training created one of my earliest teenage job opportunities. And time with girls in the pool was richer than with girls at church. My Mom dutifully endured adult swim lessons, but it didn't take. John, thank you for sharing your family story about community-building. This is a good model for anywhere: how to build commonality and cooperation around simple shared neighborhood values and pleasures.

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John Hancock's avatar

One of my favorite adventure stories is The Life of Pi, about a boy and a tiger in a lifeboat. But his name is not the number, it's picene, like fish. Swimming is how his early life is framed in the tale, in a British swim facility just like this post describes, only in colonial India. Thanks, John, for confirming its reality.

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