Frenchman Bay, Western Australia Explained

Type:town
Frenchman Bay
State:wa
Lga:City of Albany
Local Map:yes
Zoom:14
Coordinates:-35.0936°N 117.9497°W
Postcode:6330[1]
Pop Year:2021
Area:0.6
Stategov:Albany
Fedgov:O'Connor

Frenchman Bay is a locality in Western Australia. It is approximately from Albany on the opposite side of the bay.

History

The site is in the traditional settlement area of the Mineng Aboriginal tribe.

Frenchman Bay, first named in 1887,[2] has been a significant site in the recent history of the entire region. George Vancouver, the first European explorer of King George Sound, landed here in 1791. A water source at Whalers Beach was subsequently visited again and again by seafarers. The water supply later enabled the establishment of whaling stations and was a destination for day trippers and tourists. Just north of what is now Goode Beach, a settler settled for the first time on the peninsula. Later a hostel and a campsite were built.[3]

Originally, the name Frenchman Bay referred to a larger area that also included Goode Beach and the Vancouver Peninsula to the north. In 2000, Vancouver Peninsula was split from Frenchman Bay.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vancouver Peninsula . Australia Post.
  2. Web site: Recent History . Frenchman Bay Association . 2013-07-19 . 2019-07-19 . en.
  3. Web site: Register of Heritage Places – Assessment Documentation: Frenchman Bay Whaling Station (ruin) . Heritage Council of Western Australia . 2008 . 2019-07-19 . PDF . en.