List of heritage places in Fremantle
List of heritage places in the City of Fremantle based on information from the State Heritage Office's inHerit database. The inHerit database includes places which are on the State Register of Heritage Places, the City of Fremantle's Municipal Heritage Inventory, the National Trust's List of Classified Places, the National Heritage List and the Commonwealth Heritage List.[1]
List
Name | No. | Street | Number in inHerit |
Note | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
McDonald Smith Building | 22–32 | Cliff St | 00858[2] | A two-storey commercial building built in 1895. | |
Courthouse/Police Station complex | 45 | Henderson St | 00878[3] | Complex built between 1896 and 1903 and includes police station, courthouse, accommodation buildings, drill hall, and lock-up. | |
Fremantle Passenger Terminal | Victoria Quay | 03363[4] | Also known as Victoria Quay Function and Exhibition Centre. Built between 1961 and 1962. | ||
Oceanic Hotel | 8 | Collie St | 00862[5] | Rivendel Residential Units. It was brought by the Sannyasins in the 1980s. | |
R.S.L. Club | 81–83 | High Street | 00922[6] | Built in 1934 as a bank. | |
ANZ Bank Building | 84 | High St | 00924[7] | Built in 1935. | |
Frank Cadd Building | 33 | Phillimore St | 00983[8] | Fares House. Built in 1890 and is now part of the University of Notre Dame. | |
Hotel Fremantle & residence (at rear) | 6 | High St | 00900[9] | Residence was built in 1885 and the hotel was built in 1899. During WWII it was set up as a hospital and operating theatre. It is now part of the University of Notre Dame. | |
Federal Hotel, Fremantle | 23–25 | William St | 01018[10] | Three storey hotel built in 1887 and extended in 1904. Between 1989 and 2016 it was known as Rosie O'Grady's before it reverted back to its original name. | |
Turton | 25 | Harvest Rd. North Fremantle | 01036[11] | Residential structure built in 1904 and designed by Talbot Hobbs. | |
Commissariat Buildings (fmr) (Customs House & Bonded Warehouse, Maritime Museum) | Cliff St, Croke Ln & Marine Tce | 00857[12] | Built using convict labour between 1850 and 1952. Designed by James Manning and is currently home to the Western Australian Museum Shipwreck Galleries. | ||
Fremantle Post Office | 13–15 | Market St | 00951[13] | Built in 1907 and designed by Hillson Beasley. | |
Athena Lodge (fmr) | 35 | High St | 00913[14] | Built in 1901. | |
Houses | 13–15 | Thompson Rd North Fremantle | 01043[15] | Built 1897. | |
Duty Free Store | 10 | Elder Place | 03705[16] | Built in 1907 and design by Joseph Francis Allen. | |
Union Stores Building | 41–47 | High St | 00915[17] | Built in 1895. | |
National Hotel | 98 | High St Fremantle | 00926[18] | Built in 1895, with the second storey added in 1902. It was damaged by fire in 1975 and in 2007. | |
Round House and Arthur Head Reserve | Arthur Head, Western end of High St | 00896[19] | The Roundhouse was built between 1830 and 1831. | ||
Fremantle Municipal Tramways Car Barn (fmr) | 1 | High St | 00897[20] | Built in 1905. Only the facade remains as part of commercial and residential complex. | |
Tarantella Night Club | 5 | Mouat St | 00958[21] | former German Consulate and former shipping office, Norddeutscher-Lloyd Building. | |
Dalkeith House | 160 | High St | 00931[22] | Private residence built in 1897 for James Gallop, and designed by O.H Nicholson. | |
Ardmore Residential Units (Ardmore Terrace Houses) | 203–215 | High St | 00938[23] | Residential terrace houses built in 1907, plus a single dwelling built in 1906. | |
Imperial Chambers | 35–55 | Market St corner Leake St | 00954[24] | Built in 1896 for Edwin Foss. | |
Fremantle Railway Station | Phillimore St | 00974[25] | Built in 1907. | ||
House | 36 | Wray Ave | 01025[26] | Seven roomed house built in 1897 for Caroline Wade Dressmaker. | |
Reckitt & Colman Building Facade | 21–29 | Cliff St | 00855[27] | Facade was purpose built between 1890 and 1895 in front of cottages, which were demolished in 1967. Facade was listed with the National Trust in 1974. | |
Atwell Buildings | 112–122 | High St | 00929[28] | Built in 1893. | |
Holdsworth House | 1 | Bateman St | 04550[29] | Built in 1895. Part of a precinct of Federation period residences developed by Lionel Holdsworth. | |
Norfolk Island Pine | Marine Tce | 04363[30] | Esplanade Park, Fremantle. | ||
House & Moreton Bay Fig Tree | 195 | High St | 00937[31] | The house was built in 1886. The original owner was nurseryman and Fremantle council auditor Philip Webster. The Moreton Bay Fig is believed to have been planted around this time and it is also believed to be the source of many other trees in the area, including the Proclamation Tree. | |
Court House (fmr) | 18 | Marine Tce Cnr Mouat St | 00946[32] | Built in 1884. Water Supply Office, Haven, Tanderra, Uniting House. | |
Proclamation Tree and Marmion Memorial | Cnr | Adelaide & Parry Sts | 00841[33] | A Moreton Bay Fig, planted 21 Oct 1890. | |
Tolley & Co Warehouse | 1 | Pakenham St | 00968[34] | Built in 1897. Tolley & Co were wine and spirit merchants sole distributors for Schweppes' Soda and McEwans Edinburgh beers. | |
Old Kerosene Store | Arthur Head, Western end of Mews Rd | 00846[35] | Built in 1884. Current tenants are Kidogo Arthouse. Other uses Harbour & Lights Dept. Boatshed. | ||
Orient Hotel | 39 | High St | 00914[36] | Built in 1902. | |
Bank of New South Wales (fmr) (Dalgety Building, Millennium) | 7 | High St corner Cliff St | 00902[37] | Built in 1899 for the Bank of New South Wales. Coincides with the commencement of building inner harbour. | |
Warwick | 79 | Solomon St | 02906[38] | Built in 1898 for Charles Hudson, a merchant who became an inaugural Commissioner of the Fremantle Harbour Trust. The name Warwick was given to the property when it was used as nurses quarters by the Fremantle hospital. | |
Water Police Station & Quarters | 10–20 | Marine Tce | 00945[39] | Current building built in 1903. The site was home to Water Police from its inception in 1851. | |
Commercial Building | 2–6 | Market St cnr Elder Place | 00950[40] | Built in 1915. | |
Victoria Pavilion | Fairburn St | 00874[41] | Fremantle Oval Grandstand built in 1897 and named after Queen Victoria to celebrate her Diamond Jubilee in 1897. | ||
Two Houses | 2 & 4 | Barnett St | 00848[42] | Built in 1896. First resident was Isaac Bolton, coach builder and founder of Bolton & Sons Coach Builders.
No. 2 restored by Les Lauder early 1970s. Subsequently owned by John Dawkins, one time Australian Treasurer. No. 4 was owned by brother Jeremy Dawkins in 1980s. |
|
Fremantle Fire Station | 18 | Phillimore St | 00982[43] | Built in 1908 under controversial circumstances. It was retained under controversial circumstances when the Fire Brigade built its replacement in 1977. | |
Interfoods | 14 | South Tce | 03712[44] | Built in 1897. First known restaurant was a Spanish restaurant, which opened in 1901. | |
Howard Smith Building | 1–3 | Mouat St | 00957[45] | ||
Film and Television Institute (Fremantle Boy's School) | 92 | Adelaide St | 00842[46] | Former boys school built between 1854 and 1855 using convict labour. | |
House and Detached Shop, Fremantle | 40–42 | Holdsworth St | 00943[47] | Built c1850. Originally a bakery with the baker Thomas Day residing in the terrace house until c1930. | |
Commercial Building | 16 | High St | 00905[48] | Built in 1895. | |
Victoria Hall | 179 | High St | 00935[49] | Originally called St John's Hall, it was designed by Talbot Hobbs and built between 1896 and 1897. It was renamed Victoria Hall as part of Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee celebrations in 1897. | |
Strelitz Buildings | 30 | Mouat St | 00963[50] | Built in 1897 for Richard Strelitz, consul for Denmark and act-consul for Sweden. Interned during World War I. Herbert Hoover resided there. | |
Old Customs House | 4–8 | Phillimore St Cnr Cliff St Fremantle | 00977[51] | Former Customs House, built in 1908. Also known as Phillimore Chambers. | |
Scots Presbyterian Church | 86 | South Tce | 01009[52] | Built in 1890. | |
Two Terrace Houses | 14–16 | Nairn St | 00964[53] | Built between 1890 and 1891, and restored in 1983. | |
Evan Davies Building | 13 | South Tce | 00861[54] | Literary Institute, built in 1899. | |
Electricity Substation, Fremantle | 12 | Parry St | 03711[55] | Built in 1932. Fremantle Municipal Tramways & Electric Light, Board Substation. SECWA Museum was the last occupant of the buildings. | |
Fowler's Warehouse | 38–40 | Henry St | 00889[56] | Fowler established at the site in 1854. They purchased adjoining land and built the current building between 1899 and 1900. Currently owned by the City of Fremantle. | |
Chamber of customs Building | 16 | Phillimore St | 00980[57] | Built in 1912 for the Fremantle Chamber of Commerce, who continue to operate out of the building. | |
Higham's Buildings | 101 | High St Cnr Market St | 00927[58] | Original Higham's store started in the 1850s by Mary Higham. Additions in 1890s and 1900s resulted in the current appearance. | |
CY O'Connor Memorial | 1 | Cliff St | 00852[59] | Built in 1911 and designed by Pietro Porcelli. | |
Commercial Hotel | 80 | High St | 00921[60] | Hotel on the site since the 1840s and was first called the Albert Hotel. In 1888 it changed its name to the Commercial. The hotel was rebuilt in 1908, with John McNeece as the architect. | |
Four Terrace Houses | 87–93 | South Tce | 04202[61] | Built in 1880. | |
House | 75 | Ellen St | 00870[62] | Built in 1895. | |
Town House Triple | 23–27 | Ellen St | 03706[63] | Three attached stone residences built in 1880, pre gold rush era. | |
Four Terrace Houses | 19–25 | Point St | 00986[64] | Originally owned by the Mechanics Institute. It was sold in 1897 and the terrace houses were built. | |
Sail and Anchor Hotel | 64 | South Tce, Cnr Henderson St | 01002[65] | Freemasons' Hotel, built between 1901 and 1903. | |
Owston's Buildings | 9–23 | High St | 00909[66] | Owston/Ouston's buildings built in 1892 and designed by Talbot Hobbs. | |
Norfolk Street 26–28 | 26–28 | Norfolk St | 00966[67] | Built in 1865, and includes a corner shop. Noted for the early use of a Flitch beam. | |
Esplanade Park, Fremantle | Marine Terrace | 17714[68] | |||
Bank of Australasia (fmr) (Dept. of Health Building) | 18 | High St | 00906[69] | Built in 1901. In 1939, it became offices for the Commonwealth Marine Branch. Later became the offices for 1987 America's Cup. | |
Taylor Memorial Drinking Fountain & Horse Trough | Cnr | Market & Phillimore Sts | 00949[70] | Built in 1903 by English stoneware manufacturer Doulton and Company. | |
South Fremantle Post Office | 174 | Hampton Rd. South Fremantle | 01045[71] | Built in 1896. The design reflects previous works done under the control of George Temple Poole. | |
The Knowle (on Fremantle Hospital grounds) | Alma St | 03226[72] | Built in 1853 with convict labour. Later used as the first building of the Fremantle Hospital. | ||
Ajax Buildings (Purdies) | 49–59 | High St | 00916[73] | Built in 1908. | |
Commercial Bank (fmr) | 20 | High St | 00907[74] | Built in 1901. | |
Commonwealth Bank building | 82 | High St | 00923[75] | Built in 1934. Hospital Benefit Fund of WA. | |
Mills & Co Building (fmr) | 19–21 | Essex St | 03708[76] | Built between 1905 and 1906 for William Sandover & Co. | |
Esplanade Hotel | 46 | Marine Tce cnr of Collie and Essex streets | 00947[77] | Built in 1875 and restored in 1985 for the America's Cup. | |
Wilhelmsen House (Dalgety & Co, Elder Building) | 11 | Cliff St, Cnr Phillimore St | 00854[78] | Built in 1902 and designed by Talbot Hobbs. Initially housed the Fremantle harbour trust and the Royal Australian Navy intelligence headquarters during WWII. | |
Princess Theatre (fmr) | 29–33 | Market St cnr Leake St | 00953[79] | Location of the Racehorse Hotel from c1850 until the theatre was built in 1912. | |
Manning Buildings & Chambers | William, High, Market Sts & South Tce | 00928[80] | Built in 1902. | ||
House | 196 | South Tce | 01005[81] | Built c1901. Typical single storey limestone and brick with Iron construction of the period. | |
St John's Anglican Church, Fremantle (St John The Evangelist Church) | 3 | Adelaide St | 00844[82] | Built in 1879. | |
PS Art Studio & Gallery | 26 | Pakenham Street | 18772[83] | Built in 1907. One of the few internally intact warehouse in Fremantle. | |
Fremantle Synagogue | 92 | South Terrace | 01010[84] | Skid Rose. Built in 1902. First purposely built synagogue in Western Australia. | |
Port Flour Mill | 15 | Essex St | 00871[85] | Built in 1862, using limestone from Arthur Head. | |
Tannatt Chambers | 8 | High St | 00903[86] | Built in 1902 and design by EM Dean Smith. | |
Warehouse Complex | 37–45 | Cliff St | 00860[87] | Owned by George Shenton. The additions designed by Talbot Hobbs were completed in 1903. | |
Commercial Buildings | 17–23 | South Tce cnr Collie St | 00997[88] | Built in 1895. | |
Four Terrace Houses | 18–24 | Queen Victoria St | 00251[89] | ||
Two Houses | 12–14 | Norfolk St | 00967[90] | Both built prior to 1880, possibly as early as 1860. Originally numbered 38/36 until the street were renumber in 1935 to 1936. | |
Union Bank | 4 | High St Cnr Cliff St | 00899[91] | Completed in 1889. In 1930, it became the Flying Angel Mission. The chapel was added in 1935. | |
St. Patrick's Basilica and Presbytery | 47 | Adelaide St. | 00845[92] | Built between 1910 and 1916. | |
Robert Harper Flour Building (fmr) (Jebsens) | 49 | Phillimore St cnr Pakenham St | 00984[93] | Built in 1890 and demolished in 1964. It had been a vacant lot until the 1990s. | |
Doig and Horne Building | 119–123 | High St | 00930[94] | Built in 1895 purchased by Henry Atwell in 1903. A long facade was added in 1906, joining it to Atwell building. In 1929, an arcade was incorporated into the building. | |
House | 16 | Essex St | 00872[95] | Built between 1845 and 1879. | |
Commercial Building | 85–87 | High St | 00925[96] | Built c1901 for former mayor George Davies. Refurbished in 1971. | |
Sweetman's House | 9 | Russell St | 00992[97] | Built in the 1880s for William Sweetman. | |
Marine House | 7–9 | Leake St | 00944[98] | Built in the 1890s. It has been occupied by: Vacuum Oil Co, Olympia skating ring, Fremantle Providoring Company. | |
Pair of Two-Storey Terrace Houses | 10–12 | Wray Ave | 01020[99] | Built in 1897. | |
Mercantile Stevedores Warehouse | 27–29 | Henry St | 00886[100] | Built in 1898. | |
Hall and Solomon Building, Davis Wool Stores | 52 | Henry St | 00892[101] | Built c.1880. It was named after F&C Hall and Elias Solomon for whom the building was purported to have built for. | |
Kreglinger Buildings | 16–20 | Mouat St | 00961[102] | Built in 1890. | |
Artillery Barracks & Fremantle Harbour Signal Stn (fmr) (Victoria Barracks) | Cnr | Queen Victoria & Burt Sts | 00991[103] | Built in stages between 1911 and 1956. It includes rifle and houses, guard houses, military hospital, gym, naval store, and horse and cart shed. | |
Seppelts Building Facade | 5 | Pakenham St | 00969[104] | ACTA Building. The actually building is at 3 Pakenham St. It was possibly built in the 1860s as a dwelling. It was converted into a warehouse in 1893. | |
North Fremantle Town Hall (fmr) | 222 | Queen Victoria St North Fremantle | 01038[105] | Built in 1902. Includes the library, which was built in 1906. | |
Marich Buildings, Fremantle | 20–28 | Henry St Cnr High St | 00885[106] | Built in 1897. | |
House | 31 | Russell St | 00993[107] | Received a Fremantle award. | |
Sadliers Warehouse/Customs Agency | 34–36 | Henry St | 00888[108] | Built in 1881 and 1885. Was converted into residences in 1992. | |
Christian Brothers College, Fremantle | 41–51 | Ellen St | 00898[109] | Christian Brothers College (CBC), St. Patrick's School, Edmund Hall. | |
Dalkeith Opera House | 52–62 | South Tce | 01003[110] | Built c1908. It is currently Metropolis Night Club. | |
Town House | 37 | Ellen St | 00866[111] | Residence, built in 1897. | |
Bank of Adelaide building | 60–64 | High St | 00918[112] | Built in 1910. The addition of a third floor was rejected in 1984, but was approved in the 1990s. | |
Cellars Restaurant | 10 | High St | 00904[113] | Built in 1900. | |
Lionel Samson Building (Samson Cottage) | 31–35 | Cliff St | 00856[114] | Cottage built in 1835 and expanded in 1895. | |
Westpac Building | 22 | High St Cnr Mouat St | 00908[115] | Built in 1892. Western Australian Bank, Challenge Bank. | |
Fremantle Arts Centre | 1–21 | Finnerty St | 00875[116] | Built between 1861 and 1886. Was the former Lunatic Asylum & Old Women's Home, Asylum for the Criminally Insane. Also a US Navy barracks during WWII. | |
Wesley Church | Cnr | Market & Cantonment Sts | 00955[117] | Built 1889, 1928. | |
Fremantle Grammar School | 200 | High St | 00894[118] | Built in 1885. Also known as Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Girton College and currently a private residence. | |
North Fremantle War Memorial (Fallen Soldier's Memorial, North Fremantle) | Cnr | Queen Victoria St & Harvest Rd North Fremantle | 01039[119] | Designed by Secretary of the North Fremantle, RSl J.McCabe. Constructed in 1923, it includes the names of the fallen of North Fremantle from WWI. In 1945, the names of those who fell in WWII were added. | |
Marine House | 9 | Pakenham St | 00971[120] | Built in 1904. AWA Buildings. Only the facade remains. | |
Moreton Bay Fig Group | St Johns Square | 04364[121] | Group of 6 trees. | ||
Atwell | 77 | Solomon St | 02907[122] | Built in 1898 for Henry Atwell, Fremantle businessman and former convict. | |
Tum Tum Tree, Hua Sen Restaurant | 130–132 | High St | 02853[123] | Norfolk Island Hibiscuis; Lagunaria patersonia planted c.1950 and shades the restaurant outdoor area. | |
P & O Building (Australian Union Steamships Navigation, Company Building) | 17 | Phillimore St | 00981[124] | ||
Grieve and Piper Buildings | 28 | Mouat St | 00962[125] | Built in 1890. Converted in 1976 to the "Eric Car Gallery", and received an award in 1983. | |
North Fremantle Post Office | 211–217 | Queen Victoria St North Fremantle | 01037[126] | Built in 1898. Was used for 70 years as a police station with lock-up. Then used for 20 years as post office. One of the few remaining original buildings of the North Fremantle townsite. | |
Star Hotel | 5 | Essex St | 03707[127] | Built in 1878 and rebuilt in 1914. Primarily accommodation and currently used for backpackers accommodation. | |
Quartermaine's Building | 3–5 | Henry St | 00880[128] | Built in 1907 as a warehouse. Was used in 1984 to 1985 by Spare Parts Puppet Theatre. Now converted to residential apartments. | |
Cleopatra Hotel | 24 | High St | 00910[129] | The first hotel was built on this site in the 1850s, with the Cleopatra being built in 1882. | |
Lance Holt School | 10 | Henry St | 00882[130] | Built in 1892 as a coffee house. Became a school in the 1970s. | |
Trades Hall (fmr) | 6 | Collie St | 00864[131] | Built in 1904 and designed by Joseph Allen. | |
Samson House | 61 & 63 | Ellen St | 0869[132] | Built in 1889 for Michael Samson, mayor of Fremantle between 1905 and 1907. It was designed by Talbot Hobbs. | |
Seven Terrace Houses | 18–30 | Holdsworth St | 00941[133] | 7 "gentlemans residences", built in 1886. | |
Hillcrest | 23 | Harvest Rd Cnr Turton St North Fremantle | 01035[134] | Hillcrest Salvation Army Home; Maternity Hosp, Hillcrest Senior Citizen's Residence. Built in 1901 and added around 1922, 1934, 1958 and 1979. | |
Commercial Building | 14 | Mouat St | 00960[135] | Built before the gold rush developments in 1890. | |
CBH Grain Silos (Fremantle Grain Terminal, Co-operative Bulk Handling Silos) | North Quay Port of Fremantle | 03921[136] | Built in 1948 and was demolished in 2000. | ||
Princess Chambers (Biddles Building) | 21–27 | Market St | 00952[137] | Built in 1899 and designed by Edwin Summerhayes. | |
Central Wool Company | 21–23 | Henry St | 00884[138] | Used as shops and warehouse since the 1880s. In 2002, it became part of the University of Notre Dame Fremantle. | |
Westpac Bank | 66–70 | High St | 00919[139] | Commercial Bank of Australia, built in 1908. | |
eight Terrace Houses | 2–16 | Price St | 00987[140] | Built in 1899 in what was once Lord street no's 28–42. The street was renamed in 1908 and renumbered in 1935. | |
Bateman Buildings | 47 | Henry St | 00891[141] | Built in 1870. | |
nine Terrace Houses & 2 Shops | 79–93 | South Tce | 00999[142] | Built between 1880 and 1930. | |
Music School | 21 | Parry St | 00973[143] | Built in 1897. It was converted to a music school in 1953 by Toni and Harry Baker. | |
Fremantle Technical College Annexe | 41 | South Tce | 01007[144] | Fremantle Technical College. Formerly the Infants and Girls School, built in 1877. | |
Great Southern Roller Flour Mill | Thompson Rd North Fremantle | 03645[145] | Built in 1922 for the Goodman Fielder Flour Mill, 'Dingo' Flour Mill (colloquial usage). | ||
House | 19 | Quarry St | 00988[146] | Built in 1891 by policeman James Gilchrist. | |
His Majesty's Hotel | 2–8 | Mouat St | 00975[147] | Built between 1903 and 1904. It was also known as His Lordship's Larder, and Phillimore's Hotel. | |
Seppelts Warehouse | 7 | Pakenham St | 00970[148] | Strelitz Bros; Vacuum Oil Company. It was a dwelling in 1880. Additions made it a boardinghouse from 1882 to 1904. It was redeveloped into a warehouse in 1908 by Stelitz brothers who then bought 74/76 Henry St properties that adjoined the rear. | |
Fremantle Customs House (Falk & Company Warehouse) | 2 | Henry St, corner 41 Phillimore St | 00879[149] | Built in 1888, with additions made in 1896 and 1903. Originally the edge of the Swan River, the site wasn't developed until work reclamation work was done for the Fremantle railway station and line. | |
Clyde Cottages – 5 Terrace Houses | 11–19 | Russell St | 00994[150] | Built in 1899. | |
P J Morriss Building | 13–19 | Mouat St | 00956[151] | Built in 1896. W Sandover Warehouse, Notre Dame University. | |
Two Houses | 18–20 | Nairn St | 00965[152] | Built in 1887 for Edward Davies. | |
Central Chambers | 61–63 | High St | 00917[153] | Built in 1906. | |
Wray Avenue Precinct | Wray Ave | 01026[154] | Majority of the buildings along the full length of Wray Ave. (including Hampton Buildings). Some building have individual listings as well. | ||
Lenaville (Shenton House) | 186 | High St | 00936[155] | Built in 1884, 1895, and shop added c.1920. Sometimes referred to as Shenton, it has no association with Shenton family. It was named Lenaville after the third owner, Lena Blacker, who ran it as a boarding house. Also used as a private hospital. | |
Terrace of Six Houses | 19–29 | Holdsworth St | 00942[156] | Residential workers accommodation built in 1903. | |
Lilly's Buildings | 34–42 | Cliff St | 00859[157] | Built in 1897 for James Lilly, a prominent businessman, co-founder of the Fremantle YSailing Club and member of the Federation League. The building is currently part of the Fremantle campus of University of Notre Dame Australia. | |
Dux Factory | 25 | Quarry St | 00989[158] | Built as a bottling factory in 1895. It is currently home to Fremantle Press. | |
Fremantle Prison | The Terrace | 01014[159] | Built by convicts between 1852 and 1859. It was world heritage listed in 2010. | ||
Mills & Wares Warehouse (fmr) | 2–4 | Croke Lane | 00865[160] | Designed by Talbot Hobbs in 1891. It was brought by Mills & Wares c1966. It was converted into apartments c2002. | |
Fremantle Town Hall | 8 | William St | 01015[161] | Built in the Second Empire style; completed in 1886. | |
Two Terrace Houses | 87–89 | South Tce | 03717[162] | South Terrace Medical Centre. | |
Adelaide Steamship House | 10–12 | Mouat St | 00959[163] | Built in 1900 for the Adelaide Steamship Company. | |
Building | 7–9 | William St | 01017[164] | ||
Warders Cottages | 7,19–29,31 | Henderson St | 00877[165] | Accommodation for Enrolled Pensioner Force, 19–29. Built in 1851 with remainder section built in 1858. | |
Dalgety's Bond Store (fmr) (Elder Buildings) | 1 | Phillimore St | 00976[166] | Built in 1902 and designed by Talbt Hobbs. | |
Monument Hill & War Memorials | High, Knutsford & Bateman Sts | 03956[167] | Fremantle War Memorial; Memorial Reserve, Obelisk Hill, Memorial Hill. | ||
Princess May Reserve | 92 | Adelaide Street | 00851[168] | Precinct includes: Princess May Girls School, Film & TV Institute, Clanceys Tavern. | |
Victoria Quay | Victoria Quay | 03602[169] | Includes Immigration Centre Complex, A B C & E Sheds, Slipways, Cranes, South Mole, Fremantle, workshops, stores and residences. | ||
House | 30 | Suffolk St | 01012[170] | Built before 1880. It was listed in the estate of Gordon Drummond Ralston, master carpenter and forman of convicts who died 1878. | |
The Tannery | 22 | Russell St | 04588[171] | Built in 1854. Old Barracks, cottages, WA Tannery & Fellmongering Ltd. | |
Three Terraced Houses | 20–24 | Essex St | 00873[172] | Group of three terraced houses built c1880. One was the home of Frederick Jones, shipbuilder and Fremantle councillor 1888–1914 (except 1896–98, 1908–10). | |
Fremantle Markets | Cnr | South Tce & Henderson St | 01006[173] | Built between 1898 and 1902. | |
Two Attached Houses | 70–72 | Hampton Rd | 00876[174] | Built in 1896 for Charles Henry Pierce. | |
McIlwraith Building (Scottish House, Patrick's Building) | 10–12 | Phillimore St | 00978[175] | Built in 1898 using Donnybrook stone. | |
Warders' Terrace | 3–11 | Holdsworth St | 00940[176] | Built in 1897 on the boundary of the original convict establishment grant, and used as accommodation for warders. | |
Matilda Bay Brewing Company Building | 130 | Stirling Hwy North Fremantle | 03649[177] | Built in 1930. Ford Motor Co Factory. | |
Phillimore Chambers | 7–11 | Phillimore St cnr Cliff St | 00979[178] | Built in 1899. | |
Pearse's Buildings (Commercial Bank (fmr)) | 72–78 | High St | 00920[179] | Built for James Pearse c1900 As an office and showroom for their footwear factory in North Fremantle (burnt down in Mid 60's). Modified in 1945 for Pearse Brothers. | |
Adelec Buildings, Fremantle | 26–36 | High St | 00912[180] | Built in 1906. Fothergills' Building. | |
W D Moore & Co Warehouse | 42–46 | Henry St | 00890[181] | Site development occurred in 1844. The current building dates from 1869 to 1899, when the facade was added and unified all the buildings in one structure. The owner, William Dalgety Moore, was the first president of the Fremantle Chamber of Commerce, and first treasurer of Fremantle town Council. | |
Woolworth's Building (facade only) | 4–16 | Adelaide St | 00843[182] | ||
P&O Hotel | 25 | High St | 00911[183] | Originally the Victoria Hotel built c1870. The hotel, was favoured by ships captains. It was sold in 1898, and then renovated and renamed as the P&O in 1901. Currently part of the University of Notre Dame Australia, and is used as classrooms and as a dormitory for international students. | |
References
- ↑ SHO list shows places based on information from the State Heritage Office's inHerit database which includes places which are included in the State Register of Heritage Places, the City of Fremantle's Municipal Heritage Inventory, the National Trust's List of Classified Places, the National Heritage List and the Commonwealth Heritage List.
- ↑ McDonald Smith Building #00858
- ↑ Fremantle Police station #00878
- ↑ Passenger terminal #03363
- ↑ Oceanic Hotel #00862
- ↑ RSL Club #00922
- ↑ ANZ Bank Building #00924
- ↑ Frank Cadd bdg #00983
- ↑ Hotel Fremantle #00900
- ↑ Rosie O'Grady's #01018
- ↑ Turton #01036
- ↑ Commissariat Building #00857
- ↑ Post office #00951
- ↑ Athena Lodge #00913
- ↑ 13–15 Thompson #01043
- ↑ Duty Free store #03705
- ↑ Union Stores Bdg #00915
- ↑ National Hotel #00926
- ↑ Arthur Head & Roundhouse #00896
- ↑ Tramways Barn #00897
- ↑ Tarantella #00958
- ↑ Dalkeith House #00931
- ↑ Ardmore Unit #00938
- ↑ Imperial Chambers #00954
- ↑ Fremantle railway station #00974
- ↑ 36 Wray #01025
- ↑ Reckitt & Colman facade #00855
- ↑ Atwell buildings #00929
- ↑ Holdsworth House #04550
- ↑ Norfolk Is. pine #04363
- ↑ 195 High st #00937
- ↑ Court house #00946
- ↑ proclamation tree #00841
- ↑ Tolley & Co #00968
- ↑ Kerosene Store #00846
- ↑ Orient Hotel #00194
- ↑ Bank NSW #00902
- ↑ Warwick #2906
- ↑ Water Police #00945
- ↑ 2–6 Market #00950
- ↑ Victoria Pavilion #0874
- ↑ Barnett St #00848
- ↑ Fire station #00982
- ↑ Interfoods #03712
- ↑ Howard Smith #00957
- ↑ Film and TV Institute #00842
- ↑ 40–42 Holdsworth #00953
- ↑ 16 High st #00905
- ↑ Victoria Hall #00935
- ↑ Strelitz #00963
- ↑ fmr Customs house #00977
- ↑ Scots Church #01009
- ↑ 14–16 Nairn #00964
- ↑ Evan Davies #00861
- ↑ Electricity Substation #003711
- ↑ Folwers Warehouse #00889
- ↑ Chamber of Commerce #00980
- ↑ Higham's #00927
- ↑ CY O'Connor Memorial #00852
- ↑ Commercial Hotel #00921
- ↑ 87–93 Sth tce #04202
- ↑ 75 Ellen st #00870
- ↑ Town house triple #03706
- ↑ 19–25 Point st #00986
- ↑ Sail & Anchor #01002
- ↑ Owston's Buildings #00909
- ↑ 26–28 Norfolk #00966
- ↑ Esplanade res #17714
- ↑ Australasia bank #00906
- ↑ Taylor memoial #00949
- ↑ Sth Freo Post office #01045
- ↑ The Knowle #03226
- ↑ Ajax building #00916
- ↑ Commercial Bank #00907
- ↑ Commonwealth Bank #00923
- ↑ Mills & Co #03708
- ↑ Fremantle Eslanade Hotel #00947
- ↑ Wilhelmsen House #00854
- ↑ Princess Theatre #00953
- ↑ Manning bld #00928
- ↑ 196 South Tce #01005
- ↑ St John's #00844
- ↑ PS Art #18772
- ↑ Frematle Synagogue #01010
- ↑ Port Flour Mill #00871
- ↑ Tannatt Chambers #00903
- ↑ Warehouse Complex #00860
- ↑ 17–23 Sth tce #00997
- ↑ 18–24 Queen Vic st #00251
- ↑ 12–14 Norfolk #00967
- ↑ Union Bank #00899
- ↑ St Patrick's Basilica #00845
- ↑ Robert Harper #00984
- ↑ Doig & Horne #00930
- ↑ 16 Essex st #00872
- ↑ 85–87 High st #00925
- ↑ Sweetman's House #00992
- ↑ Marine House #00944
- ↑ 10–12 Wray Ave #01020
- ↑ Mercantile Stevedores Warehouse #00886
- ↑ Solomon building #00892
- ↑ Kreglinger #00961
- ↑ Victoria Barracks #00991
- ↑ Seppelts Building #00969
- ↑ Nth Freo Town Hall #01038
- ↑ Marich building #00885
- ↑ 31 Russell #00993
- ↑ Sadliers Warehouse #00888
- ↑ CBC #00898
- ↑ Dalkeith opera #01003
- ↑ 37 Ellen St #00866
- ↑ Bank Of ADL #00918
- ↑ Cellars restaurant #00904
- ↑ Lionel Samson building #00856
- ↑ Westpac Building #00908
- ↑ Arts Centre #00875
- ↑ Wesley Church #00955
- ↑ Fremantle Grammar #00894
- ↑ Nth Freo War Memorial #01039
- ↑ Marine House #00971
- ↑ Moreton bay fig groups #04364
- ↑ Atwell #02907
- ↑ Tum Tum Tree #02853
- ↑ P&O building #00981
- ↑ Grieve & Piper #00962
- ↑ Nth Freo Post Office #01037
- ↑ Star Hotel #03707
- ↑ Quartermaine's #00880
- ↑ Cleopatra Hotel #00910
- ↑ Lance Holt School #00882
- ↑ Trades Hall #00864
- ↑ Samson House #0869
- ↑ 18–30 Holdsworth #00941
- ↑ Hillcrest #01035
- ↑ 14 mouat #00960
- ↑ CBH Silo's #03912
- ↑ Prince Chambers #00952
- ↑ Central Wool CO. #00884
- ↑ Westpac Bank #00919
- ↑ 2–16 Price #00987
- ↑ Bateman Buildings #00891
- ↑ 79–93 South Tce #00999
- ↑ Music School #00973
- ↑ Tech College Annexe #01007
- ↑ Dingo Flour #03645
- ↑ 19 Quarry #00988
- ↑ His Maj #00975
- ↑ Seppelts warehouse #00970
- ↑ Falk & Co. #00879
- ↑ Clyde Cottages #00994
- ↑ PJ Morriss #00956
- ↑ 18–20 Nairn #00965
- ↑ Central Chambers #00917
- ↑ Wray Ave Precinct #01026
- ↑ Lenaville #00936
- ↑ 19–29 Holdsworth #00942
- ↑ Lilly's building #00859
- ↑ Dux Factory #00989
- ↑ Freo Prison #01014
- ↑ Mills & Wares #00865
- ↑ Freo Town Hall #01015
- ↑ 87–89 Sth tce #03717
- ↑ Adelaide Stemaship house #00959
- ↑ 7–9 William #01017
- ↑ Warders Cottage #00877
- ↑ Dalgety Bond store #00976
- ↑ Monument hill #03956
- ↑ Princess May Reserve #00841
- ↑ Victoria Quay #03602
- ↑ 30 Suffolk #01012
- ↑ The Tannery #04588
- ↑ 20–24 Essex St #00873
- ↑ Freo Markets #01006
- ↑ 70–72 Hampton rd #00876
- ↑ McIlwraith #00978
- ↑ Warder tce
- ↑ Matilda BC building #03649
- ↑ Phillimore Chambers #00979
- ↑ Pearse #00920
- ↑ Adelec #00912
- ↑ Moore's building #00890
- ↑ Woolworths facade #00843
- ↑ P&O hotel #00911
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