Historic Pools at Camp Kum-Ba-Yah Nature Center
More Than a Pool: The Historic Waters of Camp Kum-Ba-Yah Nature Center 🌲
For generations of campers, the swimming pools at Camp Kum-Ba-Yah Nature Center have meant laughter, relief from the summer heat, and some of the best memories of camp. Yet these pools are more than a place to swim: they are living witnesses to a defining moment in Lynchburg’s Civil Rights history and to Camp Kum-Ba-Yah’s enduring commitment to inclusion.
The first pools opened in 1961 to support the growing summer day camp program established by Lynchburg Christian Fellowship under the leadership of Rev. Beverly Roy “Bev” Cosby. From the very beginning, the camp was founded on a radical and simple belief for its time: all children deserved a place to play, explore nature, and feel a sense of belonging .
That belief was tested in that summer.
At the time, Lynchburg, like much of the South, was deeply segregated. When African American families sought access to public swimming pools, city leaders chose to close all municipal pools rather than integrate them. In response, Bev Cosby made a courageous and controversial decision: he opened Camp Kum-Ba-Yah’s pools to the entire community, welcoming Black and white children to swim together at a moment when such an act was considered unthinkable by many .
The consequences were immediate. Some white families withdrew their children from camp. Angry phone calls followed. Campers, both Black and white, were jeered and criticized simply for sharing the water together. Yet the pools remained open. During that summer, Camp Kum-Ba-Yah became the site of Lynchburg’s first racially integrated public swimming, offering a safe and joyful refuge at a time when public spaces across the city were closing their doors .
This moment was not an isolated act of defiance, but part of a broader legacy of justice rooted in the camp’s founding values. Just months later, in 1962, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would visit the Camp Kum-Ba-Yah grounds, meeting with local leaders at the Lodge of the Fishermen, one of the only places in Lynchburg where people of different races could gather together safely. The pools, like the Lodge and the camp itself, stood as quiet but powerful symbols of what community could look like when fear gave way to courage.
Today, campers splash, swim, and cool off in those same pools. Every visit carries forward a legacy of bravery, welcome, and moral clarity. These waters remind us that Camp Kum-Ba-Yah Nature Center has always been about more than recreation. It has been about creating spaces where children are free to be children and where the values of dignity, justice, and community are lived out in real and tangible ways.
As we approach our 75th year of summer camp in 2026, we honor the history held in these pools and recommit ourselves to the vision that shaped them: a camp, a community, and a future where all children are welcome.