The seersucker suit didn’t last very long. The sisters in the Sewing Room made a blue cotton suit that zipped up the front. Wearers still needed panties and bras, but it was definitely an improvement. Sister Martha Ann described it as “more on the order of a tennis outfit.”
“It was stiffer than the seersucker,” said Sister John Mary.
“And it was shorter,” chimed in Sister Martha Ann.
The swimming pool was the pool located in the gymnasium, a building shared by Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College and the motherhouse.
“It was a beautiful pool,” remembered Sister John Mary. “It was gorgeous. The place where we dressed and where we took showers definitely was terrible, but the pool was magnificent. Oh, I loved it! The water was so clear. You couldn’t have wanted a better one.”
Sister John Mary remembers swimming in the evening during those first summers. The sisters had to line up and be divided into groups because so many wanted to swim. She remembers that they stayed in the pool about an hour or so.
“When it first opened, everybody wanted to go,” said Sister John Mary.
“Most of the time we just played around [in the water]. It was wonderful!”
After wearing the habit, the swimsuit was truly freeing. The swimmers’ legs and arms were free of clothing.
“In the winter, some of us had life saving [classes],” continued Sister John Mary. “The [gym] instructor from the college came over. On those occasions we wore tank suits.”
Tank suits were one piece, regular swim suits. It had no skirt and was very simple. “We were able to navigate around in the water with that one,” laughed Sister John Mary.
Eventually, Sister John Mary served as a life guard for the sisters whenever she was needed.
On mission, Sister John Mary ministered as a primary teacher. But each summer when she returned to the Woods, she would return to her favorite place — the swimming pool — almost every day. And 24 years ago when she retired from teaching and returned to the Woods to serve as a driver for other sisters, she still found time to swim. Yes, swimming was so important to her that she swam between 4:10 and 5:10 a.m. each morning, and she did this until the pool closed in 2003.
Sister John Mary definitely entered the Congregation in the right year!