Fremantle, Western Austrailia
16
December 2018 - Sunday
Fremantle,
Western Australia
What
happened to Saturday?
We
left San Francisco at 8:30p Friday -- arrived Sydney at 6:01 am Sunday after
about 14+ hours in the air -- then hopped a flight to Perth at about 11:30a
arriving just over 4 hours later at 1:25pm Sunday afternoon.
![]() |
| Sunrise coming into Sydney, Australia |
We
flew Qantas -- service was excellent -- we were in business so that does make a
difference -- but everything went like clockwork -- and even the food was good.
The
Esplanade Hotel in downtown Fremantle -- our home for the next six days -- is a
thirty-minute cab ride from the Perth Airport.
The hotel building housed imported
convicts from 1850 until 1855 while they built their new home -- The Fremantle
Prison. The hotel was designed in
1897 with many and varied extensions over the years. It is the perfect location -- walking
distance to everything and a free bus ride to go a bit farther out.
![]() |
| Colette and Marc at Fremantle Harbor, Australia -- "Freo" is the nickname for Fremantle |
Colette
and Marc arrive just before us -- so
after getting settled, we all meet for an early dinner at "Little
Creatures", a brewery/pub located near the hotel. Have no idea where this name came from --
but the place is very noisy -- very large -- and just "so-so" on the
food. But -- we're all tired and need to
stay up as late as possible.
Surprisingly
-- we don't feel as bad as we thought we might.
Tomorrow we'll begin exploring.
17 December 2018 - Monday
Fremantle,
Western Australia
Woke
at 5:30 am -- Phil already up and down in the lobby having coffee -- he brought
me a cup about 6:30 am. The four of us
have breakfast at "The Mill Bakehouse On Norfolk" -- very good but
not cheap. Meals seem to be very
expensive here even taking into account that the Australian Dollar is worth 70%
of the American Dollar.
Today
we will explore Fremantle, Western Australia's chief port, sitting at the mouth
of the Swan River on the Indian Ocean.
Founded and claimed as British Territory in 1829 by Captain Charles
Fremantle, this port, known as the Swan River Colony, became the western
gateway to Australia for passenger ships.
By 1832, 1500 people inhabited the colony but it was a hard life and
gradually people left. During a
depression in the early 1840's, a petition was made to England that convicts be
sent to provide much needed labor.
Between
1842 and 1850, two hundred and thirty-four juvenile offenders arrived in
Western Australia on the condition that if they apprenticed themselves to local
tradesmen they would be considered free.
![]() |
| Pat in front of The Fremantle Prison |
By
1849 the Swan River Colony was officially announced as "a penal settlement
to accelerate economic growth".
Between 1850 and 1868 more than nine thousand convicts arrived in
Fremantle -- most of them stayed after finishing their prison sentence. The Irish convicts started arriving in 1861
![]() |
| Colette and Pat inside a solitary confinement cell. |
We
begin at The Fremantle Prison taking the Convict Prison Tour, which
establishes that this prison was built by the convicts from 1850 to 1855 and
was in operation until 1991. Although
electricity was added in 1907, the prison never did have plumbing. Life in this prison was what seems to us as
unbearable. The cells are 4' x 7' with a hammock, a chair, a desk surface and a
bucket. In later years a garden was
added to the grounds so prisoners could work growing food for their population. A library was also added as were two chapels
-- Protestant -- and then in 1861 the Catholic population proposed their own
chapel and paid for it.
We
visited the "flogging post" used until 1943 -- a session with 100
lashes was not unusual. The term
"letting the cat out of the bag" comes from the cat of nine tails
that was used to flog the prisoners and kept in a bag.
![]() |
| Prison Garb at Fremantle Prison |
Two
options for leaving the prison existed:
1) Probation during which the prisoner was required to secure a
job and lodging on his own, 2) Conditional Pardon during which the
prisoner could go to any part of Australia but never go back to Great Britain.
Keeping
with the "Convict" theme for the day, we decide our next visit is to
the "Round House Precinct"
located on a headland overlooking the Swan River mouth and Cockburn Sound. The Round House, built in 1831, was the first
jail of the Swan River Colony. A
courthouse was added in 1835 and in 1844 a 15-year-old convicted murderer was
hanged in gallows nearby. The new colony
built two lighthouses and a signaling station to help with navigation in this
location as well as cottages to house pilots, lighthouse keepers and others who
kept things running.
![]() |
| View from the Roundhouse Precinct |
By
1886 the Round House became the responsibility of the local police who used it
as a short-term lock-up until 1900. The
same year, a Time Ball was erected near the lighthouse and signal station as part
of a procedure to give mariners and residents an exact daily time check. The ball was hoisted to the top of the tower
three minutes before 1pm and released at exactly 1pm by an electrical signal
sent by wire from the Astronomical Observatory in Perth. The electrical signal also triggered a shot
from a cannon. This procedure continued
until 1937 -- when it was deemed unnecessary.
In
1998 the Fremantle Signal Station was reactivated. The cannon now belongs to the Fremantle
Football Club and is fired each day at 1pm.
We just happened to be in attendance at todays firing.
![]() |
| Firing of the Canon at 1:00 pm Daily. |
We
are getting hungry so a stop at the "Bar Orient" is in order --
excellent lunch for $26 AUD for Phil and me -- not bad.
![]() |
| Lunch at the "Bar Orient" |
Then,
we're off to the Shipwreck Museum -- which is free with donation expected.
This
is a most impressive museum with large pieces of shipwrecks including the Batavia
-- a Dutch East India Company ship. On
her maiden voyage in 1629 the Batavia struck a reef near Beacon Island off the
western coast of Australia. Only 40 of the 322 aboard drowned. Survivors were transferred to various
islands. Since drinking water could not
be found, the Captain and other senior officers left the survivors in search of
water. The man left in charge of the
survivors decided to murder those who might interfere with his plan to hijack
any ship which might come by to rescue them.
The skeleton of one of the murder victims is on display in this
museum. An interesting story which can
be found on Wikipedia. All these Batavia artifacts were found in the
early 1970's by an Australian maritime archaeologist.
![]() |
| Pat at the partial wreck of the Batavia. |
The
Shipwreck Museum has many artifacts and probably deserves more time that we spend
since it is late afternoon and we are tired.
After
a brief rest -- we are out the door looking for a place to have dinner. We settle on Sandrino Cafe -- which was okay for
a light supper.
This
has been a good first day in Fremantle.
Tomorrow we'll take the train to Perth.
Thanks
for Reading.
Pat









Sisters in solitary. Great picture! Prison garb looks like cotton casual attire to me. Downloading a map to follow your trip. 😀.
ReplyDelete