Fremantle

For the suburb, see Fremantle (suburb). For other uses, see Fremantle (disambiguation).
Fremantle
Perth, Western Australia

Aerial view of Fremantle
Fremantle
Coordinates 32°03′25″S 115°44′38″E / 32.05694°S 115.74389°E / -32.05694; 115.74389Coordinates: 32°03′25″S 115°44′38″E / 32.05694°S 115.74389°E / -32.05694; 115.74389
Population 26,582 (2011 census)[1]
 • Density 4,750/km2 (12,290/sq mi)
Established 1829
Postcode(s) 6160
Area 5.6 km2 (2.2 sq mi)
Time zone AWST (UTC+8)
Location 19 km (12 mi) SW of Perth CBD
LGA(s) City of Fremantle
State electorate(s) Fremantle
Federal Division(s) Fremantle

Fremantle /ˈfrmæntəl/ is a major Australian port city in Western Australia, located at the mouth of the Swan River. Fremantle Harbour serves as the port of Perth, the state capital. Fremantle was the first area settled by the Swan River colonists in 1829. It was declared a city in 1929, and has a population of approximately 27,000.

The city is named after Captain Charles Fremantle, the English naval officer who established a camp at the site on 2 May 1829.[2] The city contains well-preserved 19th century buildings and other heritage features. The Western Australian vernacular diminutive for Fremantle is Freo.[3] The Nyungar name for the area is Walyallup.

Geography

Fremantle lies on a series of limestone hills known by the Nyungar people as Booyeembara; the sandplain to the east is Gardoo.[4][5] The original vegetation of the area was mainly Xanthorrhoea and eucalyptus trees, which were traditionally fired annually by the Aboriginal people.

Fremantle is the end of the Fremantle railway line which runs from Perth to Fremantle, run by the Western Australia's Public Transport Authority. Major highways including Stirling Highway, Canning Highway and Leach Highway have Fremantle as their start point and/or terminus.

Climate

Fremantle has a Mediterranean climate (Köppen: Csa). The regular sea breeze is known as the Fremantle Doctor, as it provides cooling relief from the summer heat when it arrives between noon and 3pm.

Climate data for Fremantle
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 42.4
(108.3)
41
(106)
39.4
(102.9)
35.8
(96.4)
28.3
(82.9)
26.3
(79.3)
25.5
(77.9)
26
(79)
26.8
(80.2)
36.3
(97.3)
39
(102)
40
(104)
42.4
(108.3)
Average high °C (°F) 27.3
(81.1)
27.9
(82.2)
26.4
(79.5)
23.6
(74.5)
20.3
(68.5)
18.1
(64.6)
17.1
(62.8)
17.3
(63.1)
18.5
(65.3)
20.1
(68.2)
23
(73)
25.4
(77.7)
22.1
(71.8)
Average low °C (°F) 17.8
(64)
18.1
(64.6)
17
(63)
14.9
(58.8)
12.7
(54.9)
11.1
(52)
10
(50)
10.2
(50.4)
11
(52)
12.3
(54.1)
14.5
(58.1)
16.5
(61.7)
13.8
(56.8)
Record low °C (°F) 11.7
(53.1)
10.2
(50.4)
7.4
(45.3)
5.1
(41.2)
5.1
(41.2)
4
(39)
3
(37)
3.1
(37.6)
2.2
(36)
5.1
(41.2)
6.7
(44.1)
9.4
(48.9)
2.2
(36)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 6.3
(0.248)
11.3
(0.445)
16.3
(0.642)
41.3
(1.626)
112.8
(4.441)
165.5
(6.516)
156.2
(6.15)
117.7
(4.634)
69.2
(2.724)
42.2
(1.661)
18.2
(0.717)
11.4
(0.449)
764.6
(30.102)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.2 mm) 2.6 2.6 4.2 7.8 14.1 17.8 19.3 17.4 14.4 10.9 6.8 3.9 121.8
Average relative humidity (%) 57 55 57 59 62 64 66 63 62 62 59 60 61
Source: Bureau of Meteorology [6]

History

The traditional owners of the land on which the city of Fremantle is built are the Whadjuk Noongar people who called the area Walyalup[7] ("the place of crying"[8]). To the local Noongar people, Fremantle is a place of ceremonies, significant cultural practices and trading.

Anglesea Point and the limestone hill area at Arthur Head (where the Round House prison stands) to Point Marquis was called Manjaree, an important meeting place[9] where bush paths converged and a major trading place for Whadjuk and neighbouring Noongars. Today, Whadjuk and other Noongars continue to gather and meet in Walyalup and at Manjaree.

Settlement and convict era

Completed in 1831, the Round House is the oldest public building in Western Australia. It can be seen atop Arthur Head in the painting below.
Jane Eliza Currie (wife of explorer Mark John Currie), Panorama of the Swan River Settlement, watercolour, ca. 1831, State Library of New South Wales

The area was considered as a site for possible British settlement in 1827, when Captain James Stirling, in HMS Success, explored the coastal areas near the Swan River. His favourable report was welcomed by the British Government, who had for some time been suspicious of French colonial intentions towards the western portion of Australia. As a result of Stirling's report, Captain Charles Howe Fremantle of HMS Challenger, a 603-ton, 28-gun frigate, was instructed to sail to the west coast of Australia to establish a settlement there.[10]

On 2 May 1829, Fremantle hoisted the Union Flag in a bay near what is now known as Arthur Head, and in accordance with his instructions, took formal possession "of the whole of the West Coast of New Holland" in the name of Britain's King George IV.[11]

Western Australia Day (formerly Foundation Day) is observed on the first Monday in June, although it was actually on 2 June 1829 that Captain James Stirling on the Parmelia arrived with Surveyor-General Roe and the first contingent of immigrants to set up the Swan River Colony.[12] The settlement of Perth began on 12 August 1829.

Captain Fremantle left the colony on 25 August after providing much assistance to Stirling in setting up the colony. It was then that Stirling decided to name the port settlement "Fremantle".[13]

In early September 1829 the merchant vessel Anglesea grounded at Gage Roads, at the mouth of the Swan River. She did not break up, as had been expected, but instead survived to become Western Australia's first prison hulk.[14]

On 1 June 1850, the first convicts arrived at Fremantle aboard the Scindian. The thirty-seventh and last convict ship to dock at Fremantle was the Hougoumont on 10 January 1868, signalling the end of penal transportation to Australia. Among the 280 convicts on board were 62 Fenian military and political prisoners—members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood—six of whom managed to escape the Convict Establishment in the Catalpa rescue of 1876.[15] During this period, notorious South Sea pirate Bully Hayes lived in Fremantle with his fiancée Miss Scott, daughter of the Fremantle Harbour Master.[16]

Gateway to the West

Pietro Porcelli's statue of engineer C. Y. O'Connor, who designed Fremantle Harbour, at Fremantle Port

In 1897, Irish-born engineer C. Y. O'Connor deepened Fremantle Harbour and removed the limestone bar and sand shoals across the entrance to the Swan River, thus rendering Fremantle a serviceable port for commercial shipping.[17] This occurred at the height of the late 19th century Western Australian gold rush, transforming Fremantle into a capital of trade and gateway for thousands of gold miners to the inland boom towns of Coolgardie, Kalgoorlie and Southern Cross. Camels and their Afghan drivers were familiar sights, and by-laws regulating the driving of camels through the streets of Fremantle were enacted.[18] The wealth generated during this period resulted in the construction of several prestigious hotels throughout Fremantle (see heritage buildings). Fremantle still serves as the chief general seaport for Western Australia, though far greater tonnages are exported from the iron-ore ports of the Pilbara.

Fremantle has seen many industrial conflicts, the most famous of which occurred in 1919 when rioting broke out during "the lumpers' strike", resulting in one death and many injuries.[19]

Naval operations

Federal Member for Fremantle and wartime prime minister John Curtin (left) at the launch of HMAS Fremantle, 1942

During the Second World War, Fremantle was the home of the largest base for Allied submarines in the Southern Hemisphere.[20] There were up to 125 US, 31 British and 11 Free Dutch submarines operating out of Fremantle,[21] until the Americans moved forward to the Philippines. The movements and presence of USS Sturgeon (SS-187) is a good example of such activity. Fremantle was considered a "veritable Shangri-la" among submariners during the war, however tensions between transient American and non-American soldiers often led to alcohol-fuelled violence. On 11 April 1944, a brawl between U.S. and New Zealand servicemen at the National Hotel resulted in the death from stab wounds of two Māori soldiers.[22][23]

Post-Second World War

The City of Fremantle introduced several urban renewal projects in 2012, encouraging mixed-use development by increasing the maximum building height on key sites in the CBD, including Kings Square and the inner East End.[24] In January 2013, the City of Fremantle became the first council in Australia to outlaw the use of non-degradable plastic bags within their local area.[25]

The distinctive WA Maritime Museum building on Victoria Quay

Politics

Melissa Parke, Federal Member for Fremantle since 2007

The Fremantle state seat was continuously held by the Australian Labor Party from 1924 until 2009, when it was lost at a by-election to Greens candidate Adele Carles. The seat was returned to Labor (Simone McGurk) in the 2013 State election.[26] The federal electorate has returned Labor members continuously since 1934, including former Prime Minister John Curtin, and is represented by Melissa Parke.

The local government of the City of Fremantle consists of a mayor and council. Brad Pettitt has been the mayor since the 2009 local government elections.[27]

Fremantle has been represented by some significant Australian political figures. John Curtin served as Prime Minister during the Second World War, and is often described as one of the nation's greatest political leaders. The state's largest university and a major secondary school in Fremantle are named after him, and his statue stands in Kings Square near the Fremantle Town Hall. A long-serving mayor of the town, Sir Frank Gibson (1919–1923 and 1926–1952), was also a Liberal parliamentarian from 1942 to 1956. Gibson, a pharmacist with a shop in High Street, was admired by all sides of politics for his civic leadership and tireless work for the city, especially during the Second World War, when he is said to have visited every ship that called at the port. He was a leading figure in many civic organisations and his stepson, Dr Roger Dunkley, was medical officer with the 2nd/2nd Independent Company during the Timor campaign in the Second World War. Carmen Lawrence, the first female premier of an Australian state, later represented Fremantle in the federal House of Representatives.

On 10 November 2006, Australian state and territory attorney-generals met in Fremantle to sign the Fremantle Declaration, a restatement and affirmation of legal and human rights principles in Australia.[28] In 2011, Prime Minister Julia Gillard launched the Commonwealth Youth Forum in Fremantle as part of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2011, held in Perth 28–30 October.[29]

Heritage buildings

Looking east along High Street, one of many streets in Fremantle's city centre with well-preserved 19th century architecture

Fremantle is renowned for its well-preserved architectural heritage, including convict-built colonial-era buildings, an old jetty and port and prisons; presenting a variety and unity of historic buildings and streetscapes. These were often built in limestone with ornate façades in a succession of architectural styles. Rapid development following the harbour works gave rise to an Edwardian precinct as merchant and shipping companies built in the west end and on reclaimed land.[30]

The Round House, the oldest remaining intact building in Western Australia, was built as a gaol between 1830 and 1831.[31] The Round House had eight cells and a gaoler's residence, which all opened up into a central courtyard. In the 1800s, bay whaling was carried out from Bathers Beach below the Round House. As part of the whaling operations, a tunnel was constructed under the Round House to provide whalers with access to the town from the jetty and beach. The Round House is located in what is now known as Fremantle's West End: a collection of streets characterised by late Georgian and Victorian-style architecture at the southern end of the port. A process of gentrification in the early 1990s was accelerated by the establishment of the University of Notre Dame Australia, which occupies, and has restored, many of the buildings in the West End.

UNESCO World Heritage Site
Australian Convict Sites
Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List

Fremantle Prison, one of eleven World Heritage-listed Australian Convict Sites

Type Cultural
Criteria iv, vi
Reference 1306
UNESCO region Asia-Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription 2010 (34th Session)

When the first 75 convicts arrived from Britain in 1850 to support the colony's dwindling population, it became apparent that the Round House was inadequate to house them. The convicts built a new gaol, Fremantle Prison, which was completed in the 1850s and continued to be used as Fremantle's prison until 1991. Fremantle Prison was once one of the most notorious prisons in the British Empire. It housed British convicts, local prisoners, military prisoners, enemy aliens and prisoners of war. On 1 August 2010, a meeting of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee in Brazil placed Fremantle Prison and 10 other "Australian Convict Sites" on the World Heritage List - making it the first built environment in Western Australia to be bestowed this honour.[32] It continues to be accessible to the public for guided tours and as a venue for artistic and cultural activities.[33]

The Fremantle Arts Centre is another building constructed in the 1860s by convicts from locally quarried limestone: it is a former lunatic asylum building on Ord Street, and is one of Fremantle's most significant landmarks.[34] Today the imposing Victorian Gothic building and its historic courtyards are used for art exhibitions and music concerts.

The Fremantle Markets opened in 1897, forming a precinct providing handicrafts, speciality foods, dining halls and fish and vegetable markets. The area also hosts buskers and other street performers. The then premier, Sir John Forrest, laid the foundation stone for the markets on Saturday 6 November 1897. Over 150 stalls are housed in the Victorian-era building, which was listed by the National Trust of Australia and the state's Heritage Council in 1980. The Fremantle Markets are adjacent to several other historic buildings, including the Sail & Anchor Hotel (which contains a microbrewery), the Norfolk Hotel, the Warders Cottages, the Fremantle Technical School and Scots Presbyterian Church.

Some key historical buildings have been lost to development, while others are only extant thanks to community activism that went against the wishes of developers.[35] For example, the art deco Oriana Cinema on the corner of Queen and High streets was demolished in 1972, after only 34 years of operation.[36] This was done to make way for the widening of High Street, but that project was stopped thanks to the campaigning of the Fremantle Society and other community members, and the buildings along the southern side of High Street were retained. The Fremantle Markets nearly suffered a similar fate in the late 1970s due to another road-widening proposal.[35]

The National Hotel, one of the city's historic buildings, was almost destroyed by fire on the night of Sunday, 11 March 2007. Though the interior was gutted, the façade was saved and the building has since been fully restored with an additional rooftop bar.[37][38]

Heritage trails

The City of Fremantle has published a range of sheets related to the history of the port[39] including:

Demographics

In the 2006 Australian Census conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, Fremantle had a population of 24,835 people. For a city of small size, Fremantle is very diverse. Only 62% of the population was born in Australia, compared with the national average of 76%.[41] Indigenous Australians make up 1.6% of the population, and the largest overseas-born groups come from England (8.6%), Italy (4.4%), New Zealand (2.2%), Scotland (1.4%) and Portugal (1.0%).[42] After English, the most common language spoken at home is Italian (6.4%), exceeding the national average of 1.6%.[42] Croatian and Portuguese are each spoken by 1.1% of the population, followed by Spanish and French with 0.7% and 0.5% respectively.[42]

It has a broadly mixed-class of professions, and in 2006 had an unemployment rate of 4.5%. The city has an above-average proportion of rented dwellings (33.2%) of which a larger-than-average proportion is owned by the State Department of Housing (27.7%).[42]

54.3% of the population is Christian, largely Roman Catholic (28.6%) and Anglican (15.7%).[43] Buddhism, Islam, and other religions comprise 3.9% of the population, and approximately 42% of Fremantle residents profess no religion or did not state a religion.[43]

Education

Tertiary institutions

Fremantle's tertiary education institutions are:

The city centre is also home to a major teaching hospital, Fremantle Hospital.

Secondary schools

Primary schools

Economy

Fremantle has a diverse economy, with over 2,000 registered businesses operating across a wide range of sectors. Many of the city's enterprises are small businesses, with 75% employing fewer than five people.

Fremantle's biggest employment sector is health care and social assistance – 17.5% of the city's workers are employed in this area, reflecting the important influence of Fremantle Hospital. The transport, postal and warehousing sector employs 12.6% of workers, followed by retail, employing 10.2%. The Local Gross Product of Fremantle was $3,677 million in 2011.<ref name=http://economy.id.com.au/Default.aspx?id=372&pg=12000>"Economic profile for the City of Fremantle". Retrieved 18 February 2013. </ref>

Media

Fremantle is served by a Community Newspaper Group paper, The Fremantle - Cockburn Gazette, and by an independent local newspaper, the Fremantle Herald.

Fremantle also has an independent local radio station Radio Fremantle on 107.9FM.

Online reporting and reviews of events and places within Fremantle are comprehensively covered by a group of local designers on their popular blog, known as 'Love Freo', and by a local photographer with his daily updated blog Freo's View.

Culture

Locals and tourists travel to the Fremantle Fishing Boat Harbour for seafood

Fremantle offers a wide variety of dining experiences, with a strong emphasis on Italian and Asian cuisine as well as seafood. Various cafés and coffee shops are situated around Fremantle, particularly on the 'Cappuccino Strip', a section of South Terrace known for its alfresco dining culture.[45] The Fishing Boat Harbour has become a tourist precinct, with a mixture of microbreweries, restaurants and some of Australia's largest fish and chip shops.[45] A number of old buildings on the harbour have been renovated, including Little Creatures Brewery, which occupies a former boat shed and crocodile farm, and contains a café and art gallery.[46] The harbour's annual Fremantle Sardine Festival on Esplanade Park attracts thousands of seafood lovers every year.[47] Other annual events held at the harbour include Araluen's Fremantle Chilli Festival, the Fremantle Boat Show, and the traditional Italian Blessing of the Fleet ceremony.[48]

Fremantle—along with the inner suburbs of Northbridge and Leederville—is one of Perth's major nightlife hubs.[49] It attracts people from all over the metropolitan region for its pubs, bars and nightclubs.

There are several major annual festivals in Fremantle. First held in 1906, the Fremantle Festival is Australia's longest running community festival.[50] International street performers converge for the Fremantle Street Arts Festival, held over the Easter holiday period.[51] The Fremantle Heritage Festival celebrates local history with a variety of events, tours, concerts and workshops.[52]

The city has a large arts community, with a number of small art galleries and musical venues and a community theatre company, Harbour Theatre Inc., which has been performing in the city since 1963. There is also the J Shed situated on Bathers' Beach. J Shed houses four artists studios. Old Customs House, a heritage building just across from the working Fremantle Ports, is home to a not-for-profit artists agency, Artsource, and provides 23 artist studios, and houses several other arts organisations.

Music

Buskers playing didgeridoos at Fremantle Markets

Fremantle boasts a vibrant live music scene with many local performers and venues. Popular live music venues include Mojo's, Clancy's Fish Pub and the Fly by Night Club, all of which host local and touring performers. Bon Scott, lead singer of the Australian rock band AC/DC, grew up in Fremantle. After his death in 1980 his ashes were interred in Fremantle Cemetery. His grave site has become a cultural landmark.[53] In 2009, a statue of Scott created by Fremantle sculptor Greg James was erected at the Fishing Boat Harbour.[54]

In the mid-1970s, punk rock pioneer Kim Salmon resided at Tarantellas Nightclub in Fremantle, where he made his first public performances.[55] Singer-songwriter John Butler (frontman of the John Butler Trio) lived in Fremantle during his teenage years, and he started his music career busking in the city's streets in the 1990s. Former John Butler Trio member Gavin Shoesmith is also based in Fremantle with his band The Groovesmiths. Alternative rock/folk groups The Waifs, Little Birdy and Eskimo Joe all have connections with Fremantle, and belong to what has been dubbed the 'Freo Sound'.[56] This music scene, and that of neighbouring Perth, were explored in the 2008 documentary Something in the Water.

Other notable musicians from Fremantle include bassist Martyn P. Casey, member of The Triffids and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds;[57] American-born slide guitarist Lucky Oceans;[58] psychedelic rock band Tame Impala;[59] indie pop group San Cisco; rock musician and manager Vince Lovegrove; and Australian Idol finalist Cosima De Vito. A one off "Fremantle supergroup" named the Roundhouse formed in 2010 consisting of Dom Mariani (ex-The Stems, the Someloves), Greg Hitchcock (You Am I, Kryptonics), Felicity Groom, Steve Gibson (The Kill Devil Hills) and Sophie Elton (the Jam Tarts, Nansing Quartet). Songs by these and other artists have been written about Fremantle; the city is the setting for the title track of Paul Kelly's 1987 album Under the Sun,[60] and The Waifs' 2004 single "Bridal Train" follows a Second World War-era war bride on a journey from Fremantle to the USA.[61]

Redline Records is a Fremantle-based independent label founded in 2000 and co-run by members of Jebediah including frontman and Fremantle-native Kevin Mitchell. Redline's primary focus is on Fremantle and Perth indie bands. In 2002, the John Butler Trio and The Waifs established Jarrah Records in Fremantle.

American metal band Fear Factory filmed the video for their 2004 single "Cyberwaste" inside the derelict South Fremantle Power Station.

The West Coast Blues & Roots Festival is held annually at Fremantle Park. RTRFM's annual Fremantle Winter Music Festival features many local Fremantle and Perth performers and is held at multiple venues.[62] From the months of October to March, the Fremantle Arts Centre hosts Courtyard Music, a weekly outdoor music event for picnickers at the property's front garden.[63] Larger concerts are held throughout the year on the Fremantle Arts Centre's 3,000 capacity South Lawn.[64] During the 1990s, Fremantle Oval was twice used for the Perth leg of the Big Day Out music festival. Local, national and international acts continue to perform at the oval.

Film and television

Fremantle has served as the setting for several films. Windrider (1986) was shot in Fremantle and starred Nicole Kidman.[65] In the 2004 film Thunderstruck, four devoted AC/DC fans travel across Australia from Sydney to Fremantle to bury their best friend next to Bon Scott's grave. Shooting for the 2006 film Last Train to Freo took place outside Fremantle railway station, while scenes in the 2010 musical film Bran Nue Dae were shot in Fremantle's West End. Other films shot and/or set in Fremantle include Wind (1992), Teesh and Trude (2003) and Two Fists, One Heart (2008).

The children's television series The Sleepover Club and Streetsmartz were set and shot in Fremantle.[66][67] In 2006, Fremantle Prison was featured on an episode of the American version of The Amazing Race. Episodes of the BBC World documentary television series Peschardt's People have been filmed in Fremantle, including an episode with Australian actress Toni Collette and another with Fremantle-based English comedian Ben Elton.

Actors from Fremantle include Emma Booth, Ewen Leslie, David Frankflin, Mary Ward and Simon Lyndon. Sam Worthington and Megan Gale attended their first acting classes at John Curtin College of the Arts in Fremantle. In 2009, Fremantle model Tahnee Atkinson won the fifth cycle of Australia's Next Top Model.

Sport and recreation

Yachts compete in the annual Club Marine Fremantle Harbour Classic, held within the confines of Fremantle Port

Global attention turned to Fremantle when it hosted the America's Cup yachting race in 1987, after Australia was the first country to ever win the race, aside from the USA, in 1983. The unsuccessful cup defence was conducted on the waters in Gage Roads, and is considered a hallmark event of the late 20th century revitalisation and gentrification of the city.[68] Fremantle has subsequently served as a stopover in the Clipper, VELUX and Volvo round-the-world yacht races, and hosted the 2011 ISAF Sailing World Championships, a major qualifying event for the 2012 Summer Olympics.[69]

Statue of John Gerovich's spectacular mark in the 1956 WAFL preliminary final. Fremantle Oval's 1890s Victoria Pavilion is in the background.

Organised Australian rules football was first played in Fremantle in the early 1880s with the Fremantle Football Club, a founding member of the West Australian Football Association in 1885. The club disbanded at the end of the 1886 season after winning its first premiership.[70] Founded in 1882, the Fremantle-based Unions Football Club entered WAFA in 1886, attracting many players from the original Fremantle club, and went on to dominate the competition with ten premiership victories. The Unions folded in 1899 and were superseded by East Fremantle (1898–), South Fremantle (1900–), and North Fremantle (1901–1915).[70] The East Fremantle Sharks are by far the most successful club in the West Australian Football League, winning a total of 29 premierships.[71] East Fremantle Oval has been the team's home ground since 1953. Today Fremantle is represented in the Australian Football League by the Fremantle Dockers, who train at the heritage-listed Fremantle Oval, shared with South Fremantle, and play their home matches at Patersons Stadium in Subiaco. The club's main rivalry is with the Perth-based West Coast Eagles. In 2013, the Dockers played in (and lost[72]) their first Grand Final.[73]

Founded in 1887, the Fremantle District Cricket Club competes in the Western Australian Grade Cricket competition, and plays its home fixtures at Fremantle's Stevens Reserve. The club has produced a number of Test players including Graeme Wood, Brad Hogg, Geoff Marsh and sons Shaun Marsh and Mitchell Marsh. Three Fremantle soccer teams compete in Football West State League competitions: Fremantle Spirit, Fremantle United and the Fremantle Croatia Soccer Club.[74]

Bathers and kite surfers at Port Beach

Fremantle is home to five beaches: Bathers Beach, River Beach, South Beach, Leighton Beach and Port Beach. The city's strong afternoon sea breeze (known locally as the 'Freo Doctor') has made its beaches a prime location for wind and kite surfing. The Fremantle Surf Life Saving Club has been active since the 1930s.[75] Fishing takes place at the many jetties and groynes surrounding Challenger, Success Boat and Fishing Boat harbours, and along Blackwall Reach at the Swan River, which is also used for canoeing, rock climbing and cliff diving.[46] A chain of islands listed as A Class nature reserves lie within 20 km (12 mi) of Fremantle, and are accessible by ferry or private boat. The largest and most well-known island is Rottnest Island, followed by Garden Island and Carnac Island. Each island is home to endemic flora and fauna, and provide opportunities for water-based activities such as sunbathing, surfing, snorkelling and scuba diving.[76]

Infrastructure

Transport

Fremantle is home to Western Australia's largest working port.[77] The Inner Harbour, in Fremantle itself, handles almost the entire container trade for the state, as well as livestock exports, motor vehicle imports and general cargo. Located fifteen kilometres south of Fremantle, at Kwinana, the Outer Harbour is one of Australia's major bulk cargo ports, handling a variety of bulk commodities, from grain to LPG.[78]

The city is the western terminus of the direct, electrified passenger railway service from the Perth CBD. Fremantle was the starting point of railways in the metropolitan area of Perth, the Fremantle railway line being the starting point of the first railway in 1881 to Guildford.

Major highways, the Stirling Highway, Canning Highway and Leach Highway connect Fremantle to the Perth CBD.

Passenger ferries operate from the port, travelling to Rottnest Island, 22 kilometres off of the coast in the Indian Ocean, and upriver to Perth city centre. Fremantle's free Central Area Transit (CAT) bus services are popular and practical ways to get around, with two services linking key points in the city and to Fremantle's inner suburbs.[79]

Health

The major health service facility in Fremantle is Fremantle Hospital, located at Alma Street, a short walk from the city centre. Fremantle Hospital is a 450-bed major acute-care teaching hospital with important tertiary links. The 24-hour emergency department was closed in 2015.[80] It is the Western Australia's referral hospital for diving and hyperbaric medicine, and has a cardiothoracic surgery centre and nuclear medicine department. It also has a 66-bed mental health facility.

As a tertiary teaching hospital, Fremantle Hospital provides almost all specialty services on site and clinical services are backed by an extensive teaching program. As well as routine departmental and hospital-wide teaching, formal postgraduate courses are offered.[81] Emergency nursing, critical care nursing, perioperative nursing and infection control courses are held regularly and a postgraduate weekend for general practitioners is held every October.[82]

Sister and friendship cities

Fremantle has sister city relationships with five cities and friendship city relationships with three cities.[83] Some of the relationships reflect Fremantle's historic migrant population. They are (in chronological order):

Fremantle also has friendship-city relationships with three cities:

See also

Notes

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Fremantle (Local Government Area)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  2. Stewart, William (2009). "Fremantle, Sir Charles Howe (1800-1869)". Admirals of the World: A Biographical Dictionary, 1500 to the Present. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 135. ISBN 9780786482887. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  3. Australians generally favour the pronunciation "FREE-mantle" over its English antecedent "Fre-MAN-tle". However, the stress commonly reverts to the second syllable in phonetic compounds such as 'North Fre-MAN-tle', 'South Fre-MAN-tle', etc. "Freo" is pronounced FREE-oh.
  4. Lyon, R. M., A Glance at the Manners and Languages of the Aboriginal Inhabitants of Western Australia, 1833; published in Green 1979 (below).
  5. Green, N. (ed.) Nyungar: The People, Creative Research Publishing, Mount Lawley College, Perth, 1979
  6. "Climate Statistics for Fremantle, WA". Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  7. "Walyalup women weavers". National Museum of Australia. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
  8. About Fremantle at City of Fremantle official website
  9. History: Migration to Fremantle at the Western Australian Museum Welcome Walls
  10. Jackson, K. (1984). Fremantle, Western Australia, p. 7
  11. Fremantle-the beginning (1972) In Gateway June 1973, £ol.2, No. 1, p. 12.
  12. Hitchcock, J.K. (1927). Fremantle, 1829–49, found in Early Days, Vol. 1, Part 1, p. 11
  13. Appleyard, R. T. and Manford, Toby (1979). The Beginning: European Discovery and Early Settlement of Swan River Western Australia, University of Western Australia Press. ISBN 0-85564-146-0. (for early history)
  14. Goulding (2007), p.14.
  15. The Fenians, FremantlePrison.com.au. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
  16. Clune, Frank. Captain Bully Hayes: Blackbirder and Bigamist. Perth: Hesperian Press, 1997. ISBN 0-85905-239-7, p. 11
  17. Shawfactor. "Local history of Fremantle".
  18. Stevens, Christine (2002). Tin Mosques and Ghan Towns: A History of Afghan Camel Drivers in Australia. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 109–112. ISBN 0-9581760-0-0.
  19. Australian Labor Federation (1920). Wikisource link to The Fremantle Wharf Crisis of 1919. Wikisource.
  20. Cairns, Lynn. Secret Fleets: Fremantle's World War II Submarine Base. Western Australian Museum, 2011. ISBN 1-920843-52-3.
  21. Cairns, L. (1995) Fremantle's secret fleets.
  22. Soldiers' deaths: Coroner's finding The West Australian, 28 June 1944, p.4, at Trove
  23. Maoris Tell Vivid Stories Of Fremantle Stabbing Brawl Which Ended In Two Deaths The Mirror, Perth, 1 July 1944, at Trove
  24. "City Centre urban renewal (Amendment 49)". City of Fremantle. City of Fremantle. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  25. Zaw, Yolanda (31 January 2013). "Freo bans plastic bags", The West Australian. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  26. http://www.elections.wa.gov.au/results/sg2013/la/FRE
  27. Meet your Council Fremantle Focus (official site)
  28. Coorey, Phillip; Dick, Tim (11 November 2006). "Fair trials accord adds to pressure over Hicks", The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  29. Mullany, Ashlee (24 October 2011). "Gillard tells youth to be idealistic", Perth Now. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  30. Irving, Robert (arch. consultant); et al. (1982). Book of Historic Australian Towns. Morrison, Robin (Photos) (1 ed.). Readers Digest. pp. 134–139. ISBN 0-909486-93-X. Easily quarried limestone was as popular with colonial builders as sandstone or bluestone was with their counterparts in New South Wales or Victoria
  31. "Fremantle Focus, History and Heritage".
  32. Fremantle Prison inscribed on the World Heritage list
  33. Mission, vision and objectives at Fremantle Prison official site
  34. Welcome to the Fremantle History Museum WA Museum site, with photographs
  35. 1 2 Davidson, Ron; Dianne Davidson (2010). Fighting for Fremantle: a history of The Fremantle Society. Fremantle Press.
  36. Fremantle Local History Centre. "Search results for 'Oriana Cinema'". Fremantle Local History Centre's photographic collection. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  37. New life for old National, inmycommunity.com.au. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  38. Development Plans, National Hotel Fremantle. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  39. Fremantle Trails
  40. http://www.toptrails.com.au
  41. "Migration" (PDF). 2006 Census. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 29 March 2007. Retrieved 23 May 2011. (table 6.6)
  42. 1 2 3 4 Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Fremantle (C) (Local Government Area)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2011-11-09.
  43. 1 2 City of Fremantle: What is our religion?, profile.id.com.au. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  44. "Curtin University sustainability". Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  45. 1 2 O'Brien, Katrina; Swaffer, Andrew. West Coast Australia Handbook. Footprint Travel Guides, 2003. ISBN 1-903471-55-9, p. 98
  46. 1 2 Hayes, Joshua (12 May 2006). "Perth's best kept secrets", 3rd Degree, Edith Cowan University Journal. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  47. Food Festivals, Ninemsn Travel (19 July 2006). Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  48. Fremantle Fishing Boat Harbour :: Events, fremantlefishingboatharbour.com. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  49. Ashworth, Susie; Bain, Carolyn; Smitz, Paul. Lonely Planet Australia. Lonely Planet, 2004. ISBN 1-74059-447-9, p. 847
  50. "Fremantle Festival". City of Fremantle. City of Fremantle. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  51. "Fremantle Arts & Artists". A Travel guide to Fremantle Western Australia. A Travel guide to Fremantle Western Australia. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  52. "Heritage Festival". City of Fremantle. City of Fremantle. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  53. Weber, Mark (17 February 2006). "Bon Scott's grave given heritage listing", PM, ABC Radio National. Retrieved 5 June 2011.
  54. Bon Scott Greg James Sculpture-Public Art
  55. "The Unofficial Kim Salmon Story" (May 1991). Pig Meat, Issue 3.
  56. O'Donnell, Mick (13 October 2004). "'Freo Sound' dominates ARIA nominations", The 7.30 Report. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  57. Ferguson, Katherine (6 May 2008). "Mid-aged musos to release first album", eMU News. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  58. Episode 54 transcript: Lucky Oceans, George Negus Tonight (ABC). Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  59. Griffin, Gil (18 June 2013). "International stars, local legends", Fremantle Football Club. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  60. Horsburgh, Susan (4 June 2007). "Song lines", Brisbane Times. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  61. Brabazon, Tara. Liverpool of the South Seas: Perth and its Popular Music. Perth: UWA Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1-920694-30-7, p. 217
  62. Events / Fremantle Winter Music Festival, rtrfm.com.au. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  63. Courtyard Music, fac.org.au. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  64. Concerts, fac.org.au. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  65. WA Films at the State Library, slwa.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 22 November 2011.
  66. Filming locations for "The Sleepover Club", imdb.com. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
  67. Filming locations for "Streetsmartz", imdb.com. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
  68. Hall, C. Michael; Selwood, John H.; Fagence, Michael (ed.); J. Craig-Smith, Stephen (ed.) (1995). "Chapter 7: Event Tourism and the Creation of a Postindustrial Portscape: The Case of Fremantle and the 1987 America's Cup". Recreation and Tourism as a Catalyst for Urban Waterfront Development: An International Survey. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 105–114. ISBN 0-275-94550-2.
  69. Longley, John (28 November 2011). "Sailors chase Olympic dreams", The West Australian. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  70. 1 2 Devaney, John. Full Points Footy's WA Football Companion. Full Points Publications, 2008. pp. 104–105. ISBN 0-9556897-1-6.
  71. Townsend, Josh (3 June 2011). "Sharks have most to lose", The West Australian. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  72. "AFL grand final: Hawthorn makes up for 2012 loss with 15-point win over Fremantle at MCG". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 28 September 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  73. Season by Season Record, fremantlefc.com.au. Retrieved 8 June 2011.
  74. "MySolar Sunday League Premier Reserves Division". Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  75. Walton, Graham (2001). Fremantle Surf Lifesaving Club History, freosurf.com.au. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  76. Fremantle Tours: Fremantle Waters, escapadecharters.com.au. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  77. "About Fremantle Ports". Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  78. "Fremantle Ports: Western Gateway to World Trade" (PDF). Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  79. "CAT Bus". Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  80. "Your Hospital Stay". Fremantle Hospital & Health Service. Fremantle Hospital.
  81. "Education and Research". Fremantle Hospital & Health Services. Fremantle Hospital. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  82. "Education and Research". Fremantle Hospital & Health Service. Fremantle Hospital. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  83. Sister cities and international relations, fremantle.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 22 May 2011.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fremantle, Western Australia.
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Fremantle.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fremantle.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.