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Mandurah is located
approximately 72kms south of Perth
(see
Map)
An enjoyable 50 minute drive, Mandurah is a water wonderland visited by day trippers and holiday makers
alike all year round. The towns population is approximately 50,000 and continuing to grow. In
fact Mandurah is the fastest growing regional town in Western Australia! It is now home to
activities such as surfing, swimming, crabbing, dolphin watching, boating, fishing and world-class
golfing, and that's just scratching the surface!
Mandurah's
first European
to settle in
the area was a
man named
Thomas Peel.
He named the
area Mandurah
which was
derived from
the Aboriginal
word 'mandjar'
which
meant 'trading
place' or
'meeting
place'.
Peel,
a cousin of
the famous
British Prime
Minister
Robert Peel,
had developed
a scheme to
settle 10 000
people in
Mandurah-Pinjarra
district and
the British
Government
granted him 1
million acres
to do so.
While
preparing to
sail to
Western
Australia, the
Secretary of
State for the
Colonies, Sir
George Murray,
insisted that
the colony be
started by 1
November 1829.
Unfortunately
Peel arrived
late and his
grant was cut
to 250 000
acres. The
scheme came to
fruition on 15
December 1829
when 169
settlers
arrived at
Cockburn
Sound, north
of Mandurah.
Although
Peel's
proposal
looked good on
paper in
reality it did
not work.
These first
settlers were
left on the
beach until
Peel decided
to move south
to Peel Inlet.
A few followed
him but most
were
disenchanted
with the
scheme and
moved north to
the Swan River
colony.
When
Peel finally
got organised
his plan did
enjoy a little
success. To
his credit the
early
development of
the Mandurah
area was
mostly his
doing. He sold
land, surveyed
roads, and
imported stock
and the tiny
settlement
struggled on.
In 1850 it was
connected to
Perth by a
coastal road
and in 1876 an
inland road
was completed.
The arrival of
the railway in
1893 saw
Mandurah
decline in
importance.
The railway
passed through
good inland
pastures which
new settlers
preferred to
the poor
coastal soils.
For
the next fifty
years
Mandurah,
deprived of
its role as a
port,
declined. By
the 1950s it
was nothing
more than a
tiny fishing
village. The
combination in
the 1950s of
an increase in
tourism
(especially
day trippers
from Perth)
and the
development of
Kwinana as a
major
industrial
centre, saw
Mandurah grow
rapidly. The
development of
the town was
further
assisted by
the
establishment
of the alumina
refinery at
Pinjarra in
the early
1970s.
Detailed
Information @ www.mymandurah.com
-Mandurah Western Australia Accommodation & Tourism Directory |