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The Freemasons
Hotel
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Fremantle
Attractive
and sophisticated historic port.
It is hard to capture the spirit of Fremantle. On one
hand it is simply Perth's port with all the elements which are
contained in such a bald description - there is a large industrial area
around the docks, grain silos (no Western Australian port could be
without them), views out to Rottnest Island, stacks of containers piled
high on the wharves, old bond stores and new buildings vying for prominence.
Yet to describe Fremantle as a 'port' is to do it
an injustice. It is a remarkable area. In the past decade it has become
the great tourist attraction in the Perth area with seeming row upon
row of interesting historic buildings, gracious modern hotels,
extensive seaside parks and enough tourist attractions to make it the
ideal (and easily accessible) day out destination for tens of thousands
of Perth locals and visitors. It is the ideal Sunday outing. Have a
meal in one of the dozens of restaurants in the area, have a picnic,
wander along the shoreline, visit the museums, gaze at the conspicuous
wealth at the yacht club, wander the old streets, visit the historic buildings.
Fremantle, pronounced 'Frmantle', was established
on 2 May 1829 when Captain Charles Howe Fremantle (after whom the
settlement was named) formally took possession of 'the whole of the
west coast of New Holland in the name of His Britannic Majesty and the
Union Jack was hoisted on the south head of the river'.
In June, Lieutenant Governor James Stirling arrived
and decided that Fremantle would be the port and that the new colony
would be developed 18 km up the Swan River on good soil which would
allow for the development of agriculture.
Fremantle was formally proclaimed in August 1829
and almost immediately the Surveyor General, John Septimus Roe, laid
out a grid system of roads on the isthmus which lay between South Bay
and North Bay.
Access to Perth at this time was difficult. Ships
arriving at Fremantle had to land their goods at the South Jetty and
have them transported across the isthmus along what is now Cliff
Street. The site was hardly ideal for settlement. It was barren and
prone to hot summer winds and cold rainy winters which converted Cliff
Street into a quagmire.
The descriptions of Fremantle at this time present a
rather grim picture of a lonely barren port where the 'Fremantle
Doctor' whipped the sands up and made life miserable for the local
inhabitants. Captain John Stokes brought the famous Beagle (the ship on
which Charles Darwin travelled) into Fremantle in 1837 and observed:
'Fremantle, of which it was wittily said by the quartermaster of one of
His Majesty's ships who visited the place, 'you might run it through an
hour glass in a day', is but a collection of low white houses scattered
over the scarce whiter sand.'
It is a comment on the nature of early Fremantle that
the first public building was a gaol. Designed by the Colonial
Engineer, Henry Willey Reveley, and located at the western end of the
High Street, it was a 12 sided building which became known as The Round
House. Today it is the oldest building in the area and is open for
inspection. Built in 1830-31 it contains eight cells and a latrine,
wash house and warder's quarters. The building, with its central
courtyard, stands impressively on the headland overlooking the town.
It is an irony that the only reason it wasn't demolished
in 1922 (there was obviously little interest in history at the time)
was because the Harbour Master protested that its demolition would
expose his house to north westerly gales. Nothing to do with history.
Everything to do with convenience.
There is a particularly informative little
brochure entitled The Round House 1831: Western Australia's oldest
public building and the Swan River Colony's first gaol which was
published as part of the Australian Bicentenary. It has a map of
Fremantle with the old buildings, many of which have long disappeared,
superimposed on the current city site. It is available from the Round
House Shop which is located nearby in a limestone cottage which was
used to accommodate the families of Fremantle harbour pilots.
Interest in this area of town also focuses on the
tunnel which was cut underneath The Round House in 1837 so that a local
whaling company could have more direct access to the harbour.
The town grew slowly over the first twenty years. At
the time the only available building materials were soft sandstone and
jarrah so most of the early buildings were a kind of modified Georgian
style with timber shingle roofs.
In the book Fremantle, T.A.G. Hungerford, notes that
'Grogshops and flies notwithstanding, by 1833 there was at the mouth of
the Swan River a small township of some 200 'good stone houses' in
regularly laid-out streets, some of them macadamised. There were two
large, wellkept inns where 'you could get clean beds and good private
rooms'...and obviously such a determination to make good that two years
later Captain Irwin could write that '...invalids from India,
accustomed to every luxury, have been thoroughly satisfied with their
entertainment. The shops and stores are provided with almost everything
the settlers are likely to require'.'
Part of the problem with the development of
Fremantle at this time was the shortage of labour - a problem which was
solved in 1850 with the establishment of the Imperial Convict Depot.
The arrival of convicts in the settlement immediately placed
pressure on the existing community. For five years the convicts
laboured to build a cell block for one thousand men, suitable
accommodation for the warders, a Commissariat and houses for the
Officers. With such a huge influx of people the centre of early
Fremantle moved from High Street and Cliff Street towards South Bay.
The life of the convicts at this time was miserable and
unbelievably hard. Perhaps the most famous of all the convicts was John
Boyle O'Reilly, a Fenian activist who arrived in 1868 and escaped in
1869 on an American whaler. He became a prominent activist in the USA
and was responsible for the escape of a number of Fenians aboard the
Catalpa in 1879.
O'Reilly wrote a book Moondyne Joe: A Story from the
Underworld in which he described the conditions of the convicts in Fremantle.
'The chain gang of Fremantle is the depth of the
penal degradation. The convicts wear from thirty to fifty pounds of
iron, according to the offence. It is riveted on their bodies in the
prison forge and when they have served their time the great rings have
to be chiselled off their calloused limbs.'
The influence of the convicts on the architecture of
Fremantle can never be overstated. From 1850 until 1868 there was a
huge building program in the settlement which has resulted in some of
the city's finest buildings. Although transportation was stopped in
1868 this didn't mean that the convicts already in Australia stopped
working. Convict labourers continued to have an impact on Fremantle
until the 1880s.
One of the most important developments of the port
occurred when the Inner Harbour was opened in 1897 after the sand bar
was removed from the mouth of the Swan River and South and North Moles
were built to prevent further silting up by the sea. This vital piece
of construction was done by the great engineer Charles Yelverton
O'Connor. There is a memorial to O'Connor at Victoria Quay outside the
Fremantle Port Authority Building.
The big turning point for Fremantle occurred in the
1980s when, through a series of fortuitous circumstances, it became one
of the premier tourist destinations in Australia. Recognition of the
city's historic heritage led to the systematic preservation and
development of the old buildings in the business district. This process
was greatly helped by the 1983 victory of Australia II in the America's
Cup competition. This meant that the cup arrived in Australia and that
the subsequent America's Cup challenge was held off Fremantle. A
certain hysteria and wishful thinking entered the minds of the
entrepreneurs and developers. However the result was the construction
of new hotels, new marinas, the development of Fremantle's foreshores,
the establishment of cycleways, and the improvement of public
facilities. Modern Fremantle is very much, post-America's Cup
Fremantle. It has an air of sophistication which was lacking in the 1970s.
Things to see:
Historic Attractions in Fremantle
1. St Johns Anglican Church
St Johns Anglican Church - located on the corner of
Adelaide and Queen Streets, this beautiful old stone church was built
in stone and consecrated in 1881. The paving stones outside are
Yorkshire flagstones which were brought to Australia as ballast for
sailing ships.
2. Fremantle Town Hall
Fremantle Town Hall - located in St Johns Square on the
corner of Adelaide and William Streets, this gracious public building
was opened on 22 June 1887 as part of Queen Victoria's Jubilee
Celebrations. It was built for the huge sum of £15 000. The clock
tower, which is one of Fremantle's prominent landmarks, is 31 m high.
The opening of the Hall was not without its mishaps.
William Conroy, the licensee of the Victoria Hotel was refused
admittance to the celebrations because he was drunk. In a fit of pique
he shot the councillor who had refused him entry. Conroy was duly tried
and sentenced to death. Executed on 18 November 1887, he was the last
person to be hanged at Perth Gaol.
3. Warders Quarters
Warders Quarters - located in Henderson Street these
old stone terrace houses were built in 1851 by convict labour. They
were built to provide accommodation for the guards and warders working
in the Fremantle Gaol. The design was typical of the Royal Engineers
and has strong elements of Georgian architecture. The Quarters are
still let to people employed in the Fremantle Gaol.
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The gates of Fremantle Gaol
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4. Fremantle Gaol
Fremantle Gaol - located on the top of a small hill at
16 The Terrace this remarkable historic gaol was built between 1851 and
1859. It was built by Captain E. Y. W. Henderson, Comptroller General
of the Convict Establishment at the time, and boasted 5 m high walls
and an excellent chapel which was surrounded by cells. It is reputedly
based on the design used at Pentonville Gaol in England. It is a
comment on the quality of the initial building that it is still being
used today although not as a place of incarceration. It closed as a
prison in 1991.
5. Fremantle Markets
Fremantle Markets - Located on the South Terrace this
historic marketplace was first opened in 1897. Known simply as the
'Freo Markets' they were refurbished in 1975 and today are home to over
140 shops. The markets are open on Friday (9.00 a.m. - 9.00 p.m.),
Saturday (9.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m.) and Sunday (11.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m.).
Fremantle Boys School - Located at 92 Adelaide Street
this wonderful old building was a school for over one hundred years
before falling into disrepair in the 1950s. It was restored in 1974 and
has since been used to house the Film and Television Institute (W.A.) Inc.
Major Museums in Fremantle
1. Western Australian Maritime Museum
Western Australian Maritime Museum - Located in Cliff
Street this is one of the best Museums in Australia. It has a
marvellous display of artifacts brought up from the depths of the
Indian Ocean and recalling a time when sailing ships were swept across
the Indian Ocean by the Roaring Forties. The highlight of the Museum is
the remarkable reconstruction of the Dutch ship Batavia which was
wrecked off the Western Australian coast in 1629. In a country where
European settlement didn't start until 1788 such a vessel is truly
ancient history.
2. Sails of the Century Museum
Further along Cliff Street (keep walking north until
you reach Victoria Quay) is the Sails of the Century Museum which is
part of the Maritime Museum. Located in B Shed this museum houses a
number of interesting vessels which worked and played in Western
Australian waters. In recent times it has housed Australia II (the boat
which won the America's Cup), Perie Banou (in which Jon Sanders sailed
solo around the world twice), a racing boat from the 1920s and a
fishing boat, the Little True, which was built around 1875.
3. Fremantle Museum and Art Gallery
Fremantle Museum and Art Gallery - Located on the
corner of Finnerty and Ord Streets this was the last of the major
buildings in Fremantle constructed by the Convict Establishment. Built
between 1861-65 it was designed as a Lunatic Asylum. Over the years it
has been used as a training hospital for midwives, a womens' home and a
base for US naval personnel during World War II. Today it is a
beautifully integrated centre. One of the highlights of a visit to the
complex is that, on Sunday afternoons, the quadrangle is used by
singers, poets and musicians. The sight of an informal concert in the
midst of an Art Gallery and Museum is a superb integration of the arts
which creates an old world ambience and charm.
4. Fremantle Prison Museum
Fremantle Prison Museum - Located at 16 The Terrace
this is an interesting and well organised display relating to prisons
and convicts since the earliest days of Western Australian settlement.
It is open from 9.30 a.m.-1.00 p.m. Monday to Friday, 1.00 p.m. - 4.00
p.m. Saturday and 11.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m. Sunday. From the upper levels
of the Museum it is possible to see inside the Prison's grounds.
5. Samson House Museum
Samson House Museum - Located on the corner of Ellen
and Ord Streets, Samson House museum was once the home of the Samson
family who can claim to have the oldest family business in Australia.
This superb old building was designed by Sir Joseph Talbot Hobbs (he
also designed Scots Church in South Terrace) for Michael Samson. The
house was bequeathed to the Western Australian Museum in 1987 and is
now open to the public. Apart from its substantial gardens the house
has excellent displays of period furniture. The focus of restoration
has been to preserve the feeling of a well to do home at the end of
last century. The result is quite magnificent. The kitchen has been
restored to late 1930s style. The beautifully restored and maintained
house is an insight into the lifestyle of one of Fremantle's most
prominent families. It is open from 1.00 p.m. - 5.00 p.m. on Thursday
and Sunday and guided tours take around 45 minutes.
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Hotel Fremantle
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This brief
description of the city's most interesting buildings really only
scratches the surface of this remarkable centre. The best and most
useful guide to the city's buildings - it includes everything from
current craft shops to the fascinating old German Consulate Building -
is Ken Jackson's Fremantle. It is a model of how a good city guide can
be presented. There is a colour photograph of each of the buildings
with an informative and detailed history of the genesis and current use
of the building complete with opening times and other necessary
details.
Heritage Trails
There are five heritage trail brochures available for
the Fremantle area.
1. Manjaree Trail
Manjaree Trail - This trail starts at Cantonment Hill
and moves down the Inner Harbour and around to the northern end of
Marine Terrace. Its interest lies in its attempt to evoke the sense of
what Fremantle must have been like for the local Aborigines before the
arrival of the Europeans. The Aboriginal names of some of the locations
are mentioned and there is a detailed description of Whadjuck people
who lived in the area.
2. Convict Trail
Convict Trail - This trail runs from where South Jetty
used to be (at Anglesea Point) around Marine Terrace and up Essex
Street to the Fremantle Gaol. The major points on the trail are South
Jetty, the Commissariat building, the locations of the first customs
house and first convict depot, the barracks and warders cottages, and
the Prison Museum. The brochure contains useful information about the
conditions which characterised convict life in the 1850s and 1860s.
3. Old Foreshore
Old Foreshore - Since the 1970s there have been so
many changes to the foreshore at Fremantle that it is easy to forget
that the port which exists today has little to do with the port as it
existed in the 1840s and 1850s. This heritage trail explains what the
port was like and just exactly how it has changed. The photographs and
early paintings of Fremantle are particularly fascinating.
4. East Fremantle Heritage Trail
East Fremantle Heritage Trail - This 3 km walk through
East Fremantle includes a number of historic hotels, the Town Hall,
former Police Station, former Post and Telegraph Office and various
private dwellings. East Fremantle became a separate municipality in
1897 and has acquired a separate identity from the more developed
Fremantle centre. It presents a very different image of Fremantle from
that of the more popular tourist attractions in the city centre.
5. Rocky Bay Heritage Trail
Rocky Bay Heritage Trail - is a combination of a 1 km
scenic walk along the cliff tops of Rocky Bay and a 2 km walk around
the old town of North Fremantle. This is another opportunity to explore
aspects of Fremantle which aren't usually covered in the standard
attractions of the city.
Fishing
North Mole is essentially a
rock wall on the northern side of the Swan River estuary. It is
predominantly an industrial area but it also boasts some excellent
light to medium tackle fishing from the rock wall but be careful as the
wall can be treacherous. The herring has a tendency to go crazy at
North Mole as soon as the sun goes down. They continue biting until
midnight. A floating rig is recommended. Dusk is also an excellent time
to catch skippy, salmon, pink snapper and squid.
Morning is ideal for salmon, some herring, garfish and
bonito. The latter are so plentiful that they can be seen swimming past
the wall and that they are very easy to catch at dawn, using a handline
or rod and reel to hurl a floating lure or live bait (garfish make the
best bait). Garfish are also prolific in the morning.
At the very end of North Mole it is said that anglers
can snare a mixed bag including pink snapper and salmon in autumn and
winter. Squid also live around the rocks, ready to take squid jigs.
Bait and tackle are available from Fleets For Tackle at 66
Adelaide St, Fremantle (tel: 08 9430 8188) and Custom Networks at 84
Hampton Rd, tel: (08) 9335 2492. In early September of the year 2000
Custom Networks will be moving to Unit 18, 219 Hampton Rd, South Fremantle.
A range of boats can be hired from Fremantle Yacht
Charters on Mews Road, by the harbour, (tel: 08 9335 3844) and from Ali
West Boat Hire, tel: (0414) 914 124.
Fishing Charters WA act as a co-ordinating booking service
for two dozen deep-sea and game-fishing charter operators in Fremantle.
They are located at 2/47 Mews Rd, Fremantle, tel: (1800) 656 616 or
(08) 9430 6001. The latter number is also used for faxes. The business
can also be contacted on a 24-hourly service by calling the mobile
number (0419) 990 884. The email address is fishwa@q-net-net.com.au
The Fremantle Amateur Angling Club can
be contacted through Mick Burgin, tel: (08) 9310 1952.
Coogee Beach and Woodman Point
Coogee is a residential suburb located 7 or 8 km south
of Fremantle via the Old Coast Road. There is a new jetty on the beach
which is popular with anglers. A reserve adjoins Coogee Beach Holiday
Park (tel: 08 9418 1810) . Bait is available from the Coogee Beach Deli
in Powell St, tel: (08) 9418 3646.
About 750 metres further south along the beach is
Woodman Point where there is another popular fishing jetty with a night
light. The Woodman Point Holiday Park (tel: 08 9434 1433) is located in
Cockburn Road.
The beach fishing at Woodman Point offers bream, garfish,
herring, whiting, tailor, flathead and, for those who are prepared,
monster rays weighing up to 100 kg.
Beyond Coogee Beach is an old shipwreck where there are huge
tailor to be had in summer (up to and beyond 12 kg). There are also 1-2
kg pink snapper, garfish, dhufish (i.e., tandan) and the odd mackerel.
Watch out for the snags.
Books on Fremantle
There are a large number of books about Fremantle.
One of the most interesting and entertaining is simply titled
Fremantle. It is written by the well known Western Australian fiction
writer, T.A.G. Hungerford, and features an excellent black and white
photographic essay on the city and its people.
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Tourist Information
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Fremantle Tourist Bureau
Town Hall
Kings Square
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9431 7878
Facsimile: (08) 9431 7820
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Hotels
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Esplanade Plaza Hotel
Marine Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9432 4000, 1800 998 201
Facsimile: (08) 9432 4000
Rating: ****
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Fremantle Hotel
6 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4300
Facsimile: (08) 9335 2636
Rating: **
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Norfolk Hotel
47 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 5405
Rating: **
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Orient Hotel
39 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 2455
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Rosie O'Gradys Hotel
23 William St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1645
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The Flying Angel Club Private Hotel
76 Queen Victoria St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 5000, 1800 815 001
Facsimile: (08) 9335 5321
Rating: ***
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Tradewinds Hotel
59 Canning Hwy
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9339 8188, 1800 999 274
Facsimile: (08) 9339 2266
Rating: ***
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Bed & Breakfast/Guesthouses
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Fremantle Colonial Accommodation Bed & Breakfast
215 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 6568
Facsimile: (08) 9430 6405
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Kilkellys Bed & Breakfast
82 Marine Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1744
Facsimile: (08) 9336 1571
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Plympton House Bed & Breakfast
53 Canning Hwy
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9319 2779 or 9335 8873
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The Riverside Bed & Breakfast
15 John St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 2209
Facsimile: (08) 9336 2209
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Danum House Bed & Breakfast
6 Fothergill St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 5874
Email: info@danumhouse.com.au
Rating: ****
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Fothergills of Fremantle Bed & Breakfast
22 Ord St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 6784
Facsimile: (08) 9430 7789
Rating: ***
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Holdsworth House Bed & Breakfast
1 Bateman St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7729
Rating: ***
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Apartments
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Harbour Village Quest Apartments
News Rd
Challenger Harbour
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 3888
Facsimile: (08) 9430 3800
Rating: ****
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No. 1 High Street Fremantle Serviced Apartments
7 John St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9305 5530
Facsimile: (08) 9430 5367
Rating: ***
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The Fremantle Biscuit Factory Apartments
330 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 5255
Facsimile: (08) 9430 5266
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Holiday Homes & Units
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Churchyard Townhouses
261A Queen Victoria St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 8525
Rating: *
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Old Bakery Villas
11 Little Howard St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7531
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Cottages & Cabins
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Barbara's Cottage Fremantle
26 Holdsworth St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 8051
Facsimile: (08) 9430 5535
Rating: ****
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Oleander Cottages
P.O. Box 379
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: 0414 549 691
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Caravan Parks
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Coogee Beach Caravan Resort
Cockburn Rd
Coogee
Fremantle
WA
6166
Telephone: (08) 9418 1810
Facsimile: (08) 9434 1347
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Fremantle Village Caravan Park
Cockburn Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4866
Facsimile: (08) 9430 8053
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Woodman Point Caravan & Camping resort
Cockburn Rd
Woodman Point
Fremantle
WA
6166
Telephone: (08) 9434 1433
Facsimile: (08) 9434 1746
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Restaurants
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Aardvarks Bar & Grill
47 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 3095
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Anthony's Tapas Bar & Restaurant
29a South Tce Piazza
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 9472
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Apicius Restaurant
2 Wray Ave
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 9892
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Artemis Coffee House
1 Tuckfield St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 5660
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Bali Sunset Restaurant
21 Essex St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 6865
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Banners Restaurant
22 Bannister St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4888
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Bengal Indian Curry House
18 Phillimore St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2400
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Bethel Guesthouse
30 Arundel St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 4656
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Caesar's Cafe Restaurant
Shop 19 South Tce Piazza
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: Ph (08) 9336 3456
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Capri Restaurant
21 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1399
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Catch Of The Day Garden Restaurant
25 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7929
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Cedar Tree Lebanese Restaurant
396 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2445
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Chunagon Japanese Steak & Seafood Restaurant
46 Mews Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1000
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Clancy's Fish Pub
Cantonment St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1351
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Croat Islands Restaurant
3 Essex Lane
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 3881
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Dai's Japanese Restaurants
310 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1303
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Drivers Restaurant
15 Riverside Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9319 1116
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Esplanade Plaza Hotel
Marine Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9432 4000
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Fiorelli Caffe Pizzeria Ristorante
19c Essex St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 6119
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Fondi Italian Restaurant Seafood & Pizzeria
82 Stirling Hwy
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 5233
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Francesca's Restaurant
25 Douro St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4410
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Fremantle Italian Club Restaurant
Marine Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 9033
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Gino's Pizzeria
95 Market St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 6126
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Istanbul Turkish Restaurant
19b Essex St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 6068
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Kafe' glada
33 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1599
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Kyrili Vilas
37 Sewell St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9319 1334
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La Dolce Vita Restaurant
34 Douro Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 8649
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Lai lai Chinese Restaurant
95 Queen Victoria St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 5193
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Le Terrazze
388 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1366
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Limones Cafe And Restaurant
77 George St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9319 1440
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Lombardo's
Mews Rd
Lombardo's Fishing Boat Harbour
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4343
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Luigi's Restaurant
17 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 4655
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Maya Indian Restaurant
75 Market St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2796
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Miss Maud
33 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1599
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Nha Trang Vietnamese Restaurant
22 Norfolk St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1061
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Oreinthyia
92 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 7797
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Overseas Chinese Restaurant & Noodle House
62 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4032
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Paesano's Restaurant & Reception Centre
16 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7277
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Peranakan Place
9 Fleet St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 7351
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Pizza Bella Roma
14 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1554
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Possums Restaurant
15 Bannister St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 6545
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Primavera Gelateria Caffe & Ristorante
72 Marine Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 1744
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Regal Diamond Seafood Restaurant
2 Market St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 8845
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Roma Restaurant
9 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 3664
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Sails Seafood Restaurant
47 Mews Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 5151
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Sala Thai Restaurant
12 Norfolk St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7749
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Song Tam Vietnamese Restaurant
211 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2659
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Sukho Thai Restaurant
Unit 6 Bannister St Shops
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2080
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Tai Wah Chinese Restaurant
Shop 22 East Fremantle Shopping Centre
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9339 6522
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Taka's Kitchen
6 Henderson St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7676
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Thai Cuisine Restaurant
37 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7039
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The Bridges Seafood Restaurant
22 Tydeman Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 4433
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The Essex Restaurant
20 Essex St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 5725
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The Mandalay Restaurant
308 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1662
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The Oyster Beds River Restaurant
26 Riverside Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9339 1611
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Tradewinds Hotel
59 Canning Hwy
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9339 8188
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Victoria Cafe & Restaurant
E-Shed
Victoria Quay Market
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 7558
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Vung Tau Vietnamese Restaurant
19 High St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 9525
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Williams Seafood Restaurant
82 Stirling Hwy
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 2775
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Zapata's Restaurante
Shop 30 South Tce Piazza
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 6401
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Cafés
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Amadeus Cafe
125 George St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9339 2954
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Cafe Locarno
1 Norfolk St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 4330
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Cafe Marconi
7 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 3215
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Falduzzi's Pizza Cafe
3 Bannister St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7969
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Fast Eddys Cafe
13 Essex St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9336 1671
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Rossini's Cafe & Pasticceria
16 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 7277
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Sail & Anchor Cafe Upstairs
64 South Tce
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 8433
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Sandrino Cafe
93 Market St
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9335 4487
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Surf Club Fish Cafe
Port Beach Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9430 6078
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The Left Bank Bar & Cafe
15 Riverside Rd
Fremantle
WA
6160
Telephone: (08) 9319 1315
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