North

Ruth Inch's daughter on saying goodbye to Yellowknife's 37-year-old pool named for her mother

Sunday is the last day the Ruth Inch Memorial Pool will be open. It's a place where Yellowknifers have been able to swim, soak and steam for nearly 37 years.

Jennifer Inch says her mom's name doesn't need to be on the city's new pool to be remembered

A pool with a lot of kids.
The Ruth Inch Memorial Pool was a busy place Saturday during a final celebratory event to mark its closure. Sunday is the last day the facility will be open to the public. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

Sunday is the last day the Ruth Inch Memorial Pool will be open — a place where Yellowknifers have been able to swim, soak and steam for nearly 37 years. The daughter of the building's namesake said she'll probably mark the day by visiting the space, shedding a tear and taking some photos.

The city is gearing up to open its newly built, $71-million Yellowknife Aquatic Centre and although it hasn't said when, exactly, that'll happen — it's closing the Ruth Inch pool so that it can train staff in the new space. 

Jennifer Inch, one of Ruth's five children, wishes the building had been given a more exciting title but said it doesn't have to bear her late mother's name for Ruth's legacy to be remembered. The pool was named after Ruth when it opened in 1988. 

How the pool got its name

It wasn't until Jennifer was an adult that she learned why her mother had wanted all of her children to learn how to swim – even though she, herself, could not. Before coming to Yellowknife, Ruth had been involved in a boating accident in her early 20s in which someone had died, said Jennifer. 

"She was determined that any children she ever had would all be strong swimmers, and she was a strong advocate for that. So we were," said Jennifer. 

A woman and a group of swimmers with their backs to the camera.
Ruth Inch looks on as her daughter Jennifer Inch, in the yellow cap, competes in a triathalon in the mid-1980s. (Submitted by Jennifer Inch)

Jennifer said both of her parents did volunteer work — Ruth worked with the public library, the Girl Guides, the YWCA and Sport North. She had also been on the board for the Polar Bear Swim Club and the N.W.T. Swim Association. 

Her mother had died around the same time that the city had decided to build its own pool — moving on from the old Fraser Tower pool. Jennifer remembers a "lovely" naming ceremony in the fall of 1988 after the swim club and swim association pitched that the space be named after Ruth. 

"It was very humbling because the community had asked for this to happen. As far as I know, it was a unanimous decision at the time. So we were very grateful. It was very nice."

A portrait of a woman.
The late Ruth Inch. Jennifer Inch remembers a 'lovely' naming ceremony for the pool in 1988 after the swim club and swim association pitched that the space be named after her mother. (Submitted by Jennifer Inch)

What's next?

As for what happens next with the facility, Jennifer has some ideas. 

She'd love for the building to be used for the city's library, with a coffee shop.

"Something that takes advantage of that view," she said.

Two girls side by side, in front of a busy pool.
Gwendolyn Kirby, 9, and Mairi Barrow, 8, enjoyed a final swim at the Ruth Inch Memorial Pool on Saturday. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

Mairi Barrow, 8, and Gwendolyn Kirby, 9, also had suggestions about what the space could be turned into. They both attended a celebratory event on Saturday to mark Ruth Inch's closure. Kirby's dream is that it be turned into an amusement park while Barrow — siding with Jennifer — is hoping it can be a new home for the public library. 

As for the name – Jennifer hopes it becomes something with meaning. 

"Lots of people have done lots of volunteering over the years since mom has died … I think it would be neat to recognize somebody else too." 

Though, she added with a laugh, "'Ruth Inch Library is kind of nice."