The word 'Fremantle' can apply to a few different things:

But most importantly, the 'port city', whose temporal or spatial boundaries are not exact.

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Hitchcock:[1]

As is generally known, Fremantle derived its name from Captain Charles H. [[../people/fremantlecharles.html|Fremantle]], of H.M.S. Challenger, which anchored off [[../islands/gardenisland.html|Garden Island]] on April 25, 1829, three years after Major [[../people/lockyeredmund.html|Lockyer]] had founded the settlement at Albany. Captain Fremantle landed on [[../arthurhead/index.html|Arthur's Head]], and on May 2 took formal possession in the name of His Majesty King George IV. The exact spot where he landed was indicated in a despatch to the Admiralty dated October 8, 1829, wherein he said that:-
"The landing took place in a little bay close to the mouth of the river, to the southward of it, being the only landing in that neighbourhood where boats could go with security, the bar at the entrance of the river generally being impassable.”
No doubt that little bay would have been the indentation in the shore between Arthur's Head and the little promontory (Anglesea Point) from which the [[../jetties/index.html|Long Jetty]] was later constructed. The landing would have been made somewhere near the western end where later a tunnel was made through the rocky head, and it was there that the first jetty was situated. ([[../hitchcock.html|Hitchcock]]: 9-10)

Ewers:
... Stirling had selected and named sites for two towns. One at the mouth of the river he chose as the port of the settlement and named Fremantle in honour of the [[../people/fremantlecharles.html|captain]] of the [[../ships/challenger.html|Challenger]]. It was an obvious choice. For the immediate future, at least, all communications with the interior would be by way of the waters of the Swan River, even though the rocky bar at its mouth rendered it difficult of access from the sea to all but small boats. (Ewers: 4-5)

References and Links

  1. [Work not found: "Hitchcock"]

[[../authors/ewers.html|Ewers]], John K. 1971, [[../ewers/index.html|The Western Gateway]]: A History of Fremantle, Fremantle City Council, with UWAP, rev. ed. [1st ed. 1948].

Hitchcock, J.K. 1929, The History of Fremantle, The Front Gate of Australia, 1829-1929, Fremantle City Council.

Freotopia

This page incorporates material from Garry Gillard's Freotopia website, that he started in 2014 and the contents of which he donated to Wikimedia Australia in 2024. The content was originally created on 12 July, 2021 and hosted at freotopia.org/places/fremantle.html (it was last updated on 15 April, 2024), and has been edited since it was imported here (see page history). The donated data is also preserved in the Internet Archive's collection.