Walkabout - An Australian Travel Guide

In conjunction with: SMH | The Age
Home
 -  -  -
Australian A-Z
 -  -  -
Australia by theme
 -  -  -
Regions and maps
 -  -  -
Flights
 -  -  -
Top Deals
 -  -  -
Accommodation
 -  -  -
Cruising
 -  -  -
Car hire
 -  -  -
Holiday rentals
 -  -  -
Traveller's tips
 -  -  -
Traveller's tales
 -  -  -
Bookshop
 -  -  -
 -  -  -
SearchSearch
 -  -  -
 
 RELATED SITES:
  • SMH Travel
  • The Age Travel
  •  



       
    Bunbury

    , WA

    Things to see
    Tourist Information
    Motels
    Hotels
    Resorts
    Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
    Apartments
    Cottages & Cabins
    Farm & Eco Holidays
    Lodges & Chalets
    Caravan Parks
    Restaurants
    Cafés


    Looking across Bunbury from Bolters Heights with St Patricks Cathedral in the foreground

    Bunbury (including Picton)
    Attractive and substantial port south of Perth
    Bunbury is an attractive and interesting mixture of a pleasant, gracious city combined with a strong and successful industrial base built on the city's port. Located 173 km south of Perth it was once an important port for the shipment of wheat from the hinterland. Today no wheat leaves through the port. Instead the port concentrates on woodchip and alumina and the city of Bunbury has become the regional commercial centre.

    The first Europeans to sail up the west coast near Bunbury were the Dutch who were duly followed by the British and the French. It was left to a French expedition in 1803, led by Captain Louis de Freycinet, to explore the site on which Bunbury now stands. Sailing in the Geographe and Casaurina, the French named Point Casaurina and mapped part of Port Leschenault, which was named after the expedition's botanist.

    British interest in the area dates from 1829 when a survey party from the infant colony on the Swan River sailed down the coast and explored the area around Koombana and Vittoria Bays. The expedition leaders, Dr Collie and Lieutenant Preston, both reported favourably on the area and the following year the colony's Surveyor General, John Septimus Roe, explored the region.

    These early favourable reports led to the establishment of a military presence in the area when members of the 63rd Regiment were sent to a camp east of the mouth of Leschenault Inlet to protect settlers against attacks from Aborigines. No settlers arrived and no Aborigines attacked. The settlement was abandoned and the soldiers were moved to Augusta.

    The establishment of European settlement in the area was the result of reports written by Lieutenant Henry William St Pierre Bunbury (after whom the city is named) who travelled through the area while on an expedition from Pinjarra to the Vasse River (now Busselton).

    Bunbury's initial impressions of the area were good. He described the area in his journal Early Days in Western Australia: 'we soon got into a more open flat country lightly timbered with Tooats, with abundance of grass and not many bushes, and saw a thick Tea tree swamp about half a mile on our right forming the head of the estuary, upon which we soon arrived ourselves by a well beaten path through a most rich and luxuriant crop of grass and sow-thistles'.

    In the same journal Bunbury describes the establishment of the settlement and its naming.

    'A township has been formed, or at least laid down on the maps, comprising the southern promontory and part of the north beach at the entrance of Port Leschenault Inlet, which the Governor named 'Bunbury' in compliment to me.'

    The first settlers, John Scott and his family, arrived in 1838 and they were followed a few years later by many of the settlers who had attempted to make a living in the experimental township at Australind. By 1841 there were almost 400 Europeans living in the new town of Bunbury.

    The township prospered initially as a result of the whalers who anchored their vessels in Geographe Bay and Koombana Bay. There were times, when whaling was at its peak, when there were literally hundreds of whaling vessels in the area.

    The town and district grew steadily through the nineteenth century. St Marks Church, the oldest church in Western Australia, was built at Picton in 1842, Bunbury became a municipality in 1871, and railway lines from Boyanup (1891) and Perth (1893) increased the port's importance. At this time Bunbury was a major port for the export of karri and jarrah which was being cut and milled in the hinterland.

    Around this time the town acquired a reputation as 'The Brighton of the Colony'. It became a pleasant seaside resort for miners flush with gold from the eastern goldfields. Guest houses, hotels and new baths were built to meet a blossoming demand for accommodation.

    The town's importance in the twentieth century has hinged on its development as a port. In 1903 the breakwater was constructed. For most of this century it has been a major port for both the wheat and timber which are produced in the inland. In the 1950s rich deposits of mineral sands were found along the coast. It became a city on 8 October 1979 and is now one of the half dozen largest cities in Western Australia.


    Things to see:   [Top of page]

    Bunbury's Major Attractions
    Bunbury has a large number of genuinely interesting historic sites ranging from the old lighthouse (which is an extraordinary combination - an earlier lighthouse has been placed on top of the present lighthouse) to St Marks Church, King Cottage and the Regional Art Gallery Arts Complex.

    Bunbury Heritage Trail
    There is an outstanding Bunbury Heritage Trail which combines a 12 km loop covering 28 important sites in the city area with a 4 km walk through the central business district which adds another 22 interesting buildings and historic sites. The fact that there are 50 places of interest within the city is an indication that Bunbury deserves at least a day of inspection. This is a city of particularly beautiful old hotels, of interesting streetscapes (looking up Victoria Street and seeing the gothic eminence of St Patricks Roman Catholic Cathedral on the skyline is awe-inspiring) and of excellent walks along the coastline.

    The Old Railway Station
    It seems as though all journeys around Bunbury start at the Old Railway Station, which is now the local Bus Depot as well as housing the Tourist Bureau. The original station was burnt down in 1904 and the building which replaced it is a classic, solid, turn of the century, station designed when rail was the vital form of transportation. The Tourist Bureau has a wide range of publications about the city and, given that many of the major attractions are off the beaten track, it is necessary to get a good map for trying to find places like St Marks Church or the Bunbury Museum.

    Stirling Street Historic Precinct
    Near the Railway Station is the Stirling Street Historic Precinct - an area which has largely escaped modernisation. Originally the road from Bunbury to Australind, in the 1890s it became a popular area and its original character - long rectangular blocks of houses, steep pitched roofs, bay windows - has been retained. It offers an excellent insight into what Bunbury was like around the turn of the century. On the corner of Stirling and Moore streets is the building known as 'The Residency', a classic Australian bungalow with a bull nosed verandah, which was built in 1896 for the Resident Magistrate. At 82 and 84 Stirling Street are two cottages which date from 1875 when the first buildings were being constructed in the area. Number 84 is notable for its raised floor which is a precaution against flooding in Leschenault Inlet.

    Further along Stirling Street are a number of significant dwellings. At 131 is a substantial residence built around 1890. Number 137 Stirling Street was originally built for the businessman and politician, Thomas Hayward whose Thos Hayward & Sons, farm equipment stores, spread throughout the south west after World War I. The Heritage Trail booklet describes the history of a number of other significant buildings in the Street.

    Leschenault Homestead
    One of the oldest buildings in Bunbury is Leschenault Homestead on the Old Coast Road. It was built in three stages starting in 1844 with additions in 1854 and 1874. The original owner was William Pearce Clifton, son of Marshall Walter Clifton, the Commissioner for Australind.

    The first stage of the cottage was built from pit sawn timber with clay, woven wattles, weatherboards and newspapers and whitewash. It is a wonderful example of necessity providing interesting building materials.

    Additions to this simple dwelling have included a detached verandah, bay windows and some very sophisticated joinery. It is a hugely important building both architecturally and historically. Unfortunately it is not open to the public.

    St Marks Church (built in 1842) - the second oldest house of worship in Western Australia

    St Marks Anglican Church
    Another building of great historical importance is St Marks Anglican Church on the corner of Flynn and Charterhouse Close (a map is needed to find the building).

    The story of the church is extraordinary. On 8 July 1840 the American whaler Samuel Wright was wrecked in Koombana Bay. The skipper, Captain Coffin, salvaged timber from the whaler and built himself a cottage at Picton. In 1842 the cottage was purchased off Coffin by the newly arrived Reverend John Ramsden Wollaston. Wollaston had arrived to become chaplain at Australind but by that time the settlement was collapsing and he was told that there were no funds to build a church and nowhere to stay.

    Wollaston was undeterred by his problems in Australind. With the help of local farmers and with remarkable tenacity (he was over 50 at the time) he built his own church out of pitsawn timber using cloth soaked in linseed oil for the windows.

    The present building was extensively restored in 1942 but the character has been retained. The churchyard contains the graves of many important early Bunbury citizens including William and Margaret Forrest (the parents of John and Alexander Forrest), Henry and Susannah King who built King's Cottage, and John and Helen Scott who were some of the district's earliest settlers.

    King Cottage Museum
    Bunbury's King Cottage Museum is located at 77 Forrest Avenue and is open by appointment (contact the Tourist Bureau for details) or by phoning (08) 9721 1586. The attractive King Cottage, which is a typical country residence, was built of hand made bricks around 1880. It was built progressively but the end result was a typical Australian brick bungalow with wide verandahs.

    The museum recreates various periods in local history. The sitting room is furnished in typical Victorian style with a painting of Lieutenant Bunbury over the sideboard. The bedroom has interesting displays of old fashioned garments and cosmetics and the kitchen has items like a butter churn, mangle and water pump.

    Geographe Bay, Rocky Point and Lighthouse
    To the west of Bunbury city centre is Geographe Bay which stretches south to Busselton. A drive along the shore is interesting because of the Rocky Point and the Lighthouse.

    It is believed that the black rocks at Rocky Point are part of a lava flow dating back 150 million years which occurred as the great integrated mass of Gondwanaland (Antarctica, South America, Africa, the Indian subcontinent and Australia) started to drift apart. The Bunbury basalt at Rocky Point cooled in columns giving it the appearance of the Giant's causeway in Northern Ireland. It was no accident that when Reverend Wollaston drew a map of Bunbury in 1843 he named this rocky outcrop 'Giant's Causeway'.

    The Bunbury lighthouse

    Bunbury Lighthouse
    At the end of the beach is the Bunbury Lighthouse with the checkered lighthouse which dates from 1959 on top of the more recent section which was built in 1971. Look carefully and you can see a join about 10 m from the ground. The original lighthouse has been attached to the present one. The light is now 25 m above the ground and can be seen 27 km out to sea.

    Marlston Hill Rotary Lookout Tower
    Further along the headland is the Marlston Hill Rotary Lookout Tower, a Bicentennial project, which offers an excellent view of Bunbury harbour and the breakwater.

    Bunbury's Pubs
    In the city centre are some attractive old pubs - The Grand Central Hotel (1900), the Wellington Hotel (1918), the Burlington Hotel (1895) and the Bunbury Hotel (1896). Perhaps the most interesting of all the hotels is the Rose Hotel (1897) on the corner of Victoria and Wellington Streets. A Rose Hotel was built on the site in 1865 but it was completely rebuilt in 1897 to cater for the booming holiday trade. Its decorative cast iron verandahs and attractive facade make it an important part of the city's streetscape.

    Other Buildings
    Other interesting features of the city centre include the Regional Art Galley and Arts Complex in Wittenoom Street which have been located in the impressive Chapel and Sisters of Mercy Convent which was sold to the local council in 1981.

    Boulters Height Lookout
    Another excellent view across the city can be gained from Boulters Height Lookout (turn beside the Art Gallery and proceed up the hill following the signs). It is named after A. H. Boulter who established a rotunda on the site in the late 1920s. In 1966, to coincide with a visit from the Queen Mother, the local council built a 26 m waterfall. The view from the lookout is dominated by St Patrick's Roman Catholic Cathedral (1920) with its red roof and soaring gothic lines.

    Tourist Radio
    Additional information - particularly very good up-to-the-minute information - about this town can be accessed by checking out Western Tourist Radio at www.touristradio.com.au . Not only does it provide excellent information for people planning to visit Bunbury but it also provides access to information for people while they are actually travelling through the area. Check it out. It is very useful information.


     

    Tourist Information   [Top of page]

     
      Bunbury Visitors Information Centre
    Old Railway Station Carmody
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9792 7205
     
     

    Motels   [Top of page]

     
      Admiral Motor Inn
    56 Spencer St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 7322
    Rating: ***
     
     
      Bunbury Motel
    45 Forrest Ave
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: 45 Forrest Ave
    Facsimile: (08) 9791 1065
    Rating: **
     
     
      Fawlty Towers Motel
    Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2427
    Rating: **
     
     
      Grittleton Lodge
    2 Molloy St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4300
    Rating: *****
     
     
      Ocean Drive Motel
    121 Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2033
    Facsimile: (08) 9721 2736
     
     
      The Clifton
    2 Molloy St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4300
    Rating: ***
     
     
      Welcome Inn
    Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 3100
    Rating: ***
     
     

    Hotels   [Top of page]

     
      Burlington Hotel Motel
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2075
    Rating: *
     
     
      Highway Hotel/Motel
    Cnr Forrest Ave & Spencer St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4966
    Rating: **
     
     
      Lighthouse Beach Resort Hotel
    Carey St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 1311
    Rating: ***
     
     
      Lord Forrest Hotel
    Symmons St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 9966, 1800 097 811
    Rating: ****
     
     
      Parade Hotel
    100 Stirling St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2093
    Facsimile: (08) 9791 2245
    Rating: **
     
     
      Prince of Wales Hotel
    41 Stephen St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2016
    Rating: **
     
     
      Rose Hotel Motel
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4533
     
     

    Resorts   [Top of page]

     
      Evedon Park Bush Resort
    P.O. Burekup 6227
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9726 3012
    Facsimile: (08) 9726 3397
     
     

    Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses   [Top of page]

     
      Bunbury Inlet Bed & Breakfast
    11 Austral Ave
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 97 21 4140
     
     
      Glen Padden Bed & Breakfast
    4 Dicken Pl.
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9795 8095
     
     

    Apartments   [Top of page]

     
      Bunbury Oceanside Apartments
    8 Sinclair Close
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 5556 or 041 9927 101
    Facsimile: (08) 9791 5900
     
     

    Cottages & Cabins   [Top of page]

     
      Ellen's Cottage
    41 King Rd
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4082
    Facsimile: (08) 9791 1620
     
     

    Farm & Eco Holidays   [Top of page]

     
      Ferguson Farmstay
    P.O. Dardanup 6236
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9728 1392
    Facsimile: (08) 9728 1392
     
     
      Ferguson Farmstay Holiday Units
    Lot 2 Henty Rd
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9728 1392
    Facsimile: (08) 9728 1392
     
     

    Lodges & Chalets   [Top of page]

     
      Kingtree Lodge
    Kingtree Rd Wellington Mill
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9728 3050
    Rating: ****
     
     
      Wander Inn
    16 Clifton St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 3242
    Facsimile: (08) 9721 3242
     
     

    Caravan Parks   [Top of page]

     
      Bunbury Caravan & Chalet Village
    Bussell Hwy
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9795 7100, 1800 007 100
    Facsimile: (08) 9795 7107
    Rating: ****
     
     
      Bunbury Glade Caravan Park
    Bussell Hwy
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 3800
    Facsimile: (08) 9721 3800
    Rating: ****
     
     
      BunburyVillage Accommodation Park
    Bussell Hwy
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9795 7100
    Facsimile: (08) 9795 7107
    Rating: ****
     
     
      Koombana Bay Caravan Park & Resort
    Koombana Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 3900
    Facsimile: (08) 9791 3933
    Rating: ***
     
     
      Riverside Caravan Park
    5 Pratt Rd
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9725 1234
    Facsimile: (08) 9725 1234
    Rating: ****
     
     
      Waterloo Village Caravan Park
    Lot 9 South West Hwy Waterloo
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9725 4434
    Rating: ***
     
     

    Restaurants   [Top of page]

     
      Admiral Motor Inn
    56 Spencer St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 7322
     
     
      Burlington Hotel Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2075
     
     
      China City Garden Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 1711
     
     
      Eagle Towers Restaurant
    Spencer St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2762
     
     
      Friendship Chinese Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 9118
     
     
      Golden Flower Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 3411
     
     
      Highway Hotel Restaurant
    Forrest Ave
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4966
     
     
      Hungry Hollow Tavern
    562 Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2033
     
     
      Josephines Italian and Seafood Restaurant
    Symmons St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 5522
     
     
      Kinkella's
    Bussell Hwy
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9792 4677
     
     
      Lord Forrest Hotel
    Symmons St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 9966
     
     
      Louisa's Restaurant
    Clifton St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 9959
     
     
      Parade Hotel Restaurant
    100 Stirling St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2093
     
     
      Prince of Wales Hotel
    Stephen St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 2016
     
     
      Rose Hotel Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 4533
     
     
      Tarantino's
    Spencer St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 7247
     
     
      The Ex-Tension Cafe Restaurant
    Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 2141
     
     
      The Joint Restaurant
    Shop 12 Bunbury Forum Shopping Centre
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 1383
     
     
      Top Of The Town Garden Restaurant
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 6979
     
     
      Venice Beach Cafe & Bar Restaurant
    Cnr William St & Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 5577
     
     
      Welcome Inn Motel Restaurant
    Ocean Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 3100
     
     

    Cafés   [Top of page]

     
      Kinkella's Cafe Bar
    Bussell Hwy
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9792 4677
     
     
      Koombana Bay Holiday Resort Restaurants
    Koombana Dve
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9791 3900
     
     
      Walkabout Cafe
    Victoria St
    Bunbury WA 6230
    Telephone: (08) 9721 9944
     




     

    This material is subject to copyright. Any unauthorised use, copying or mirroring is prohibited.

    advertising | membership | conditions of use | privacy policy