Fremantle Harbour

Last updated

Fremantle Harbour
Aerial view of Fremantle.JPG
Fremantle Port on the left
Fremantle Harbour
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
Location
Country Australia
Location Fremantle, Perth, Western Australia
Coordinates 32°03′S115°44′E / 32.050°S 115.733°E / -32.050; 115.733
UN/LOCODE AUFRE [1]
Details
No. of berths 12 [2]
Draft depth 14.5 m [2]
Statistics
Website
www.fremantleports.com.au OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg

Fremantle Harbour is Western Australia's largest and busiest general cargo port [3] and an important historical site. The inner harbour handles a large volume of sea containers, vehicle imports and livestock exports, cruise shipping and naval visits, and operates 24 hours a day. It is located adjacent to the city of Fremantle, in the Perth metropolitan region.

Contents

Fremantle Harbour consists of the Inner Harbour, which is situated on the mouth of the Swan River; the Outer Harbour, which is 20 kilometres (12 mi) south at Kwinana in Cockburn Sound and handles bulk cargo ports, grain, petroleum, liquefied petroleum gas, alumina, mineral sands, fertilisers, sulphur and other bulk commodities; and Gage Roads, which is the anchorage between Rottnest Island and the mainland. The Inner Harbour includes northern and southern wharves named North Quay and Victoria Quay respectively. All of this area is managed by the Fremantle Port Authority, a government trading enterprise, under the registered business name Fremantle Ports. [4]

History

Fremantle's port role began immediately after the Swan River Colony was founded in 1829, but the entrance to the Swan River estuary was blocked by a rocky bar, which made the mouth of the river virtually impassable for seagoing vessels. [5] The first steamship to enter the port was HMS Driver on 4 December 1845. [5]

The one-kilometre-long (3,294 ft) Long Jetty was the primary port facility until the harbour was opened in 1897 Long Jetty, Fremantle.jpg
The one-kilometre-long (3,294 ft) Long Jetty was the primary port facility until the harbour was opened in 1897

Fremantle shipping was served by the Long Jetty that extended into the open sea, where Bathers Beach is today. Cargo was offloaded onto the jetty and then taken down Cliff Street in Fremantle's West End. It was loaded onto barges that sailed up the river on the westerly sea breeze and back to Fremantle on easterly winds. Later it was transported by rail. [6] [7] Sailors disliked the Long Jetty; in 1892 Captain D.B. Shaw of the American barque Saranac described it as "terrible": [7]

entered and fought against putting the vessel alongside jetty to discharge. It is a terrible place. No place to put a vessel. No shelter whatever. All the ships have to lay and discharge at the wharf or pay lighterage.... It is blowing a gale from the SW ... and takes all our time to hold her.... She had done considerable damage to herself.... It is certainly the worst place I or anyone else ever saw. No place to send a ship of this size.... Any man who would come or send a ship a second time is a damned ass.

Alternatives

British marine engineer John Coode advised John Forrest an outer harbour near Rous Head, or one that would stretch south from Arthur's Head, could be built. Coode ruled out building a port in the river mouth as he believed it would continually silt up due to lateral sand drift. In 1887 the Fremantle Chamber of Commerce pushed hard for the southern scheme to be chosen, but the colony could not raise the estimated cost of £500,000. By 1891 Forrest was examining another proposal: an offshore facility at Owen Anchorage south of Fremantle.

But by then C. Y. O'Connor had been appointed the Colony's Engineer-in-Chief, and decided the best option was an inner harbour built in the mouth of the Swan River. The discovery of gold in Western Australia meant a working port was urgently needed, Parliament finally accepted O'Connor's plan after much political haggling, the capital was raised in London and preliminary work commenced late in 1892. [7]

Harbour development

Signal station roof gnangarra-102.jpg
Panorama of Fremantle Harbour from the roof of the former signal station on Cantonment Hill

The first stage of the harbour works began with a ceremony in which the Governor's wife, Lady Robinson, tilted the first truck load of rubble for the North Mole. [8] Blasting and dredging the rocky bar created a channel, dredging deepened the river basin, and two moles were built to protect the harbour entrance. Land was reclaimed so quays and warehouses could be built. [8] The inner harbour was opened on 4 May 1897 when the steamer Sultan drawing just 30 centimetres (1 ft) of water [9] with Lady Forrest at the wheel was the first ship to enter the partly built port. [7] [5]

While the harbour has been deepened, and facilities extended and modernised over the years, the basic structure of the Inner Harbour remains essentially unchanged to this day, testament to the boldness, brilliance and foresight of its designer.

There are two lighthouses on either side of the entrance to the harbour, the green-coloured South Mole Lighthouse, in operation since 1903, and the red-painted North Mole Lighthouse, which commenced operation in 1906, located at the end of the westernmost point of the harbour.

Mail packets

As the port neared completion, Forrest lobbied the British to have Fremantle as the port of call for the Mail Packets. Victoria and New South Wales fought for the retention of Albany as the Mail Packet port, as they were fearful they would lose business. Forrest threatened Western Australia may stay out of the proposed federation of Australian colonies unless they agreed. On 3 August 1900, Forrest won when the Postmaster-General in London informed the Post Master-General in Perth that Fremantle would be substituted for Albany as the port of call for Mail Packets. Ten days later the Orient Steam Navigation Company's RMS Ormuz, homeward bound from Sydney to London, was the first British mail carrier to enter and berth in Fremantle Harbour. In 1901 Fremantle surpassed Albany for the first time in total tonnage of ships and the following year in the number of ships when it cleared 410 ships (1,045,170 tons) to Albany's 248 ships (540,910 tons). [7]

The railway from the harbour was constructed in the 1880s, and continued to be developed with railway workshops (later moved to Midland Junction), railway sheds, railway marshalling yards, locomotive depots, and in 1907 Fremantle railway station was opened. [10]

Defences and wartime role

USS Holland with United States Navy submarines at Fremantle in March 1942 USS Holland (AS-3) tending submarines at Fremantle, Australia, on 5 March 1942 (AWM 302625).jpg
USS Holland with United States Navy submarines at Fremantle in March 1942

During World War II, the harbour accommodated scores of Allied naval vessels on active service. Battleships, troop transports, hospital ships and support vessels, including many passenger ships, were seconded into the war effort. Visitors to Fremantle during the conflict included passenger liners and converted troop carriers RMS Queen Elizabeth and RMS Queen Mary. Because of their size neither was able to take up an inner harbour berth, and instead anchored in Gage Roads. Other well-known ships to visit included RMS Strathaird, RMS Strathnaver, RMS Orion and RMS Otranto.

In 1940 boom defences were installed in the harbour as a security measure and anti-aircraft installations were built. By January 1941 an anti-submarine indicator loop was installed between Swanbourne and Rottnest to warn of any ships passing over it. [11] Outer harbour defences included an anti-submarine net spanning 9,370 metres (30,740 ft) of seabed from Woodman Point to Garden Island along Parmelia Bank, as well as another indicator loop 183 metres (600 ft) further north. [12]

Following the losses of battleships HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse on 10 December 1941 and the fall of Singapore in March 1942, many ships sought refuge at Fremantle; at times 30 were at anchor in Gage Roads. [13]

In the inner harbour, it was ... a common sight to see up to as many as four vessels of substantial size lying in tier, and it was due solely to the circumstances forced upon the port and the prevailing weather conditions that such a state of affairs could be permitted. Altogether, some 75 vessels were using the inner and outer harbours at one and the same time, and in the fortnight ending 20 March, a total of 103 vessels, Naval and merchant, and mainly seeking refuge, arrived at the port. Until these vessels could be ordered to some other destination, acute conditions persisted at the port for some weeks.

Fremantle Submarine Base was the largest submarine base in the southern hemisphere during World War II. The first United States submarines arrived at Fremantle in 1942, the US Navy built a submarine repair facility on North Quay the next year, and until 1945 the port accommodated more than 170 submarines from the US, British and Dutch navies. [13] The slipway on the south side of the entrance to the harbour where the Western Australian Maritime Museum is now located was also an important part of the wartime role of the harbour. [14]

Container Terminal

On 28 March 1969, the first container ship to arrive in Australia, Encounter Bay from the United Kingdom docked at Fremantle's new container terminal. [15] The terminal itself was officially opened the following day by Premier David Brand. [15] [16] :100 The expansion scheme began in 1965 as the Up-River Extensions Scheme, and included new berths at the container terminal. [15] The ship would then proceed to Sydney to unload and uplift more containers before proceeding to Melbourne. [17] :3 By 1970, Fremantle Port had moved 50,000 containers. [16] :100

Victoria Quay

C. Y. O'Connor statue at the entrance to Fremantle Port CY OConnor Statue Fremantle.jpg
C. Y. O'Connor statue at the entrance to Fremantle Port

A statue honouring C. Y. O'Connor was erected on Victoria Quay on 23 June 1911. It now stands near the entrance to the Fremantle Ports administration building on Cliff Street. [8]

During a waterside clash between police and workers on Bloody Sunday, 4 May 1919, lumper Tom Edwards was struck on the head with a police baton. He died three days later, leaving a wife and three children. [18] A memorial fountain by Pietro Porcelli [19] was erected in Edwards' memory that year, and was moved to Fremantle's Kings Square in 1968.

The Fremantle Passenger Terminal was constructed in time for the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. [20]

North Quay

North Quay is the portion of Fremantle Harbour on the northern banks of the Swan River, built in the late 1890s this area is now primarily used for container shipping. On the western edges is Rous Head a smaller harbour used for vessel maintenance which also includes one of several Rottnest Island ferry terminals.

Gage Roads

Gage Roads serve as a shipping lane and anchorage for sea traffic heading towards the port of Fremantle. The area is the most northern of one of four coastal basins formed from the flooding of a depression between Pleistocene aeolianite ridges running north–south, and the subsequent deposition of east–west Holocene banks. The seabed of Gage Roads is covered by seagrass.

Port Authority limits - Inner and Outer Harbour

The limits of the Inner and Outer Harbour go north beyond Gage Roads and Rottnest to a line west of Trigg, and south into most of Cockburn Sound. The outer harbour has a deep water channel north of Gage Roads, and some seven named channels south. [21]

Cockburn Sound

Cockburn Sound is an inlet that extends from the south of the mouth of the Swan River for about 25 kilometres (16 mi) to Cape Peron near Rockingham. The total area of the sound is about 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres). It is bounded on the east by the mainland suburbs of Cockburn and Kwinana, on the west by Garden Island and Carnac Island, and includes several rocky outcrops and reefs.

Fremantle Outer Harbour

The Fremantle Outer Harbour consist of, from north to south, the Alcoa Jetty, the Kwinana Bulk Terminal, the BP Oil Refinery Jetty, the Kwinana Bulk Jetty and the CBH Grain Jetty. [22]

Of these, the Kwinana Bulk Terminal and the Kwinana Bulk Jetty are operated by Fremantle Ports and serve for the import and export of bulk cargoes and liquids, among them iron ore, coal, cement clink, gypsum, liquefied natural gas, petroleum and fertiliser. The other three facilities are privately operated. [23]

The Outer Harbour deepwater bulk facilities in at Kwinana were first developed in 1955, to service the Kwinana industrial area, and saw rapid expansion in the 1960s and 1970s. [24]

Signalling equipment

South Mole light South Mole Light.jpg
South Mole light

In 1928 the Signal Station at Fremantle was moved from Arthur Head to a site on Cantonment Hill. This building was replaced in 1956 by a new structure, whose functions were superseded in 1964 by the opening of a signal station on the new Port Authority administration building, [25] which was opened by Premier Brand on 5 March. [26]

South Mole

Built in the 1890s from the southern point of the Swan River mouth is a breakwater to ensure a safe anchorage for vessels in the Inner Harbour. A light house was added in 1903, [27] initially shining white it conflicted with the Woodman point light house, leading to the South Mole light to change to a green beacon.

North Mole

Built in the 1890s the North Mole was extended almost immediately after completion and on a number of occasions since, the most recent being in the late 1980s, to allow for the addition of an entrance into the Rous Head harbour that was being constructed. Situated on the western end of the mole is a light house. Initially this shone with green light but was changed to red after it became necessary to alter the white light on the south mole to green. [28]

Engineering heritage

The harbour is listed as a National Engineering Landmark by Engineers Australia as part of its Engineering Heritage Recognition Program. [29]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Swan River (Western Australia)</span> River in Perth, Western Australia

The Swan River is a major river in the southwest of Western Australia. The river runs through the metropolitan area of Perth, Western Australia's capital and largest city.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fremantle</span> Port city in Western Australia

Fremantle is a port city in Western Australia located at the mouth of the Swan River in the metropolitan area of Perth, the state capital. Fremantle Harbour serves as the port of Perth. The Western Australian vernacular diminutive for Fremantle is Freo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gage Roads</span> Channel offshore of Fremantle, Western Australia

Gage Roads is an outer harbour area of Fremantle Harbour. It is situated in the Indian Ocean offshore from Fremantle, Western Australia, and incorporates a deep water sea channel. Gage Roads serves both as a shipping lane and as an anchorage for sea traffic heading towards the seaport of Fremantle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">City of Kwinana</span> Local government area in Western Australia

The City of Kwinana is a local government area of Western Australia. It covers an area of approximately 118 square kilometres in metropolitan Perth, and lies about 38 km south of the Perth central business district, via the Kwinana Freeway. Kwinana maintains 287 km of roads and had a population of almost 39,000 as at the 2016 Census.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint Peter Port Harbour</span> Port Harbour located in Guernsey

Saint Peter Port Harbour is located in Saint Peter Port, Guernsey. It was a natural anchorage used by the Romans which has been changed into an artificial harbour that is now the island's main port for passengers. Loose cargo, liquids and gas are shipped to and from St Sampson's harbour.

The Fremantle line is a suburban railway and service in Western Australia that connects the central business district (CBD) of Perth with Fremantle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Success Bank</span> Sandbank near Fremantle, Western Australia

Success Bank is a sandbank to the north of Cockburn Sound, off Fremantle, Western Australia within the limits of the Fremantle Outer Harbour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Coogee</span> Suburb of Perth, Western Australia

North Coogee is a coastal, western suburb of Perth, Western Australia, located within the City of Cockburn. The suburb is immediately to the north of Coogee, which takes its name from the lake, Lake Coogee, in the area, which translates to "Body of water" in the native Aboriginal Nyoongar language. Originally this lake was named Lake Munster after Prince William, the Earl of Munster, and later King William IV. The Aboriginal name Kou-gee was recorded in 1841 by Thomas Watson and has been variously spelt Koojee, Coojee and Coogee.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Victoria Quay, Fremantle</span> Wharf on the south side of Fremantle Harbour, Western Australia

Victoria Quay is a wharf on the south bank of the Swan River mouth in the Western Australian port city of Fremantle. It is separated from the Fremantle CBD by the railway line. Originally named South Quay, it was renamed Victoria Quay on 26 July 1901 in honour of the late Queen Victoria. With North Quay it forms the Inner Harbour area of Fremantle Harbour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Port Kembla harbour</span> Port in Australia

Port Kembla is a man-made cargo port or artificial harbour, with an outer harbour protected by breakwaters and an inner harbour constructed by dredging, located in the Illawarra region of New South Wales, Australia. Activities within the port are managed by the Port Authority of New South Wales.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rous Head</span>

Rous Head is a reclaimed seabed area, which is utilised as a service industrial area. It includes a small harbour area that is located on the north side of the North Mole at Fremantle Harbour.

Owen Anchorage is an anchorage located between Woodman Point and Fremantle, in Western Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haldia Dock Complex</span> Dock facility in Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port, Kolkata

The Haldia Dock Complex (HDC) is a docking facility on the Hooghly River in Haldia, West Bengal, India. It is one of the two dock systems under the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port, Kolkata, with the other being the Kolkata Dock System (KDS). The facility specializes in handling dry and liquid bulk cargo. It is located about 130 kilometres (81 mi) from the sandheads–deep sea area of the Bay of Bengal, 45 kilometres (28 mi) upstream from Pilotage Station at Sagar and 104 km downstream of Kolkata. In 1968, an oil jetty was commissioned at Haldia, and officially in 1977 the dock facility of Haldia started functioning.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fremantle Outer Harbour</span> Harbour in Western Australia

The Fremantle Outer Harbour is the part of Fremantle Harbour located in the Cockburn Sound, at the City of Kwinana, Western Australia. Fremantle Harbour consists of the Inner Harbour, which is situated on the mouth of the Swan River; and the Outer Harbour, which is 20 kilometres (12 mi) to the south. It is managed by the Fremantle Port Authority.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Challenger Battery</span> Heritage listed military installation on Garden Island, Western Australia

Challenger Battery, also referred to as J Gun Battery, is a heritage-listed battery at Entrance Point, Garden Island, Western Australia. Historically, it has is also been known as Garden Battery, Entrance Battery and, finally, Challenger Battery. It was added to the Australian Commonwealth Heritage List on 22 June 2004. It was part of the Coastal defences of Australia during World War II and the Fremantle Fortress, protecting Fremantle Harbour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fremantle Fortress</span> Second World War naval defence system for Perth, Western Australia

Fremantle Fortress was the combined coastal defences protecting the harbour of Fremantle, Western Australia, since the mid-1930s and, predominantly, during World War II. The coastal defences of the Fremantle Fortress stretched along the coastline of Perth from Cape Peron to Swanbourne and also included installations on Garden Island and Rottnest Island. While the first coastal batteries of the future Fremantle Fortress were installed at Arthur Head in 1906, the military installations protecting the harbour were expanded in the 1930s, being eventually dismantled again by 1963.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peron Battery</span> Heritage listed World War II fortification in Western Australia

The Peron Battery, at Cape Peron, was the southernmost of the Fremantle Fortress coastal defence batteries in Western Australia. Also referred to as K Heavy Battery, it was established in January 1943 and, like the Challenger Battery on near-by Garden Island, it was equipped with two mobile 155 mm guns. Additionally, it also operated two 18-pounder guns which were withdrawn once the Collie Secondary Battery became operational on Garden Island. The duty of the main guns was to cover the southern access to Cockburn Sound while the 18-pounder guns protected the a boom net which spanned between Cape Peron and Garden Island. The main battery was withdrawn again in December 1944 but the observation post and one of the Panama mounts of the Peron Battery are still preserved and accessible.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Parmelia Bank</span> Sandbanks near Fremantle, Western Australia

Parmelia Bank is a sandbank to the north of Cockburn Sound, off Fremantle, Western Australia within the limits of the Fremantle Outer Harbour. The Parmelia Bank is named after the barque Parmelia, which grounded on the sandbank in 1829.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kwinana Grain Terminal</span> Grain terminal and Jetty in Rockingham, Western Australia

The Kwinana Grain Terminal is a grain terminal in East Rockingham, Western Australia. Built from 1969 onwards and operated by the CBH Group, the facility consists of a jetty, two horizontal storages, three silos, and four open bulk heads. Grain is transported to the site by rail, stored, and eventually loaded onto ships for export.

<i>Lady Forrest</i> (pilot boat) Preserved pilot boat of Fremantle, Western Australia

Lady Forrest is a preserved pilot boat used in Fremantle Harbour from 1903 to 1967. It is currently displayed in the Western Australian Maritime Museum, Fremantle.

References

  1. "UNLOCODE (AU) - AUSTRALIA". www.unece.org. UNECE . Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  2. 1 2 "Port of Fremantle, Perth Australia". www.findaport.com. Shipping Guides Ltd. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  3. "Port at a Glance". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  4. "Fremantle Ports is the strategic manager of the Port of Fremantle". Fremantle Ports. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  5. 1 2 3 "Early History". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  6. Dena Garratt. "Fremantle Long Jetty". WA Museum. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 29 December 2008.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 John Longley. "The First Mail Steamer". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  8. 1 2 3 "C.Y. O'Connor". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  9. "Chapter 21"  . History of West Australia. 1897. p. 339 via Wikisource.
  10. "About Freo". About Fremantle website. Archived from the original on 13 October 2009.
  11. "Leighton Battery Assessment Documentation". Heritage Council of Western Australia. 28 August 1999. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  12. Matt Carter and Ross Anderson (March 2010). "Cockburn Sound World War II Anti-submarine Net" (PDF). Western Australian Museum. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  13. 1 2 "1930 - 1939". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 30 August 2008. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  14. Sherriff, Jacqui (2002). "Fremantle South Slipway: a vital World War II defence facility" (PDF). Fremantle Studies. 2. Fremantle: Fremantle Society: 106–119. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
  15. 1 2 3 "History and Heritage - Container Trade - Fremantle Ports". www.fremantleports.com.au. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  16. 1 2 Brammer, Jenne (30 March 2019). "Containers 50 Years at Freo". The West Australian.
  17. "Container ship arrives in Sydney". The Canberra Times. 4 April 1969. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  18. "The Fremantle Wharf Crisis of 1919"  . Westralian Worker . Perth: Australian Labor Federation. 2009 [1920] via Wikisource.
  19. "Artwork in Public Places Tour". Fremantle Focus website. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  20. "Cruise Ship Visit". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  21. Navigating Fremantle Waterways (PDF). Fremantle Ports. 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 March 2017. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
  22. "Interactive Port Map". fremantleports.com.au. Fremantle Ports . Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  23. "2015 Inner Harbour and Outer Harbour Fact Sheet" (PDF). fremantleports.com.au. Fremantle Ports. 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  24. "History and Heritage". fremantleports.com.au. Fremantle Ports . Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  25. "18 September 1928". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  26. "1964". Fremantle Ports. Archived from the original on 3 October 2009.
  27. "South Mole Light". Western Mail . Vol. XVIII, no. 915. Western Australia. 11 July 1903. p. 22. Retrieved 6 July 2023 via National Library of Australia.
  28. "NEW LIGHTHOUSES". The Evening Mail. No. 717. Western Australia. 3 May 1906. p. 3. Retrieved 6 July 2023 via National Library of Australia.
  29. "Fremantle Harbour, 1900-". Engineers Australia. Retrieved 27 April 2020.

Further reading