FREMANTLE


Meaning of FREMANTLE in English

city and principal port of Western Australia, on the Indian Ocean at the mouth of the Swan River (which forms an inner harbour). Now part of the Perth metropolitan area, Fremantle is one of Australia's largest ports and an initial landfall for ships from Europe. It was laid out in 1829 and named after Captain Sir Charles Fremantle, a British naval officer who took possession of the area around the river mouth in order to prevent French or U.S. incursions there. Not subject to fog, storms, or strong tides, the port became a major whaling centre. It grew during the late 19th century by serving the CoolgardieKalgoorlie goldfield (320 miles inland), and, in 1901, with harbour improvements, it surpassed the port of Albany, 230 miles (370 km) southeast, in importance. During World War II it served as the principal Allied submarine base in the Southern Hemisphere. Fremantle, a city since 1929, is now a major industrial centre manufacturing superphosphate fertilizer, furniture, refined sugar, scoured wool, leather, ships, steel, automobiles, cement, petroleum products, and aluminum. A terminus of the Trans-Australian Railway, Fremantle is also linked by rail to the state's chief agricultural areas. Exports include petroleum, grains, flour, wool, mineral concentrates, and refrigerated meats. The large industrial complex of Kwinana is nearby. The outer harbour is 73 square miles (190 square km) in extent, while the inner harbour (in the mouth of the Swan River), opened in 1897, was expanded in 1969 with a container terminal employing one of the world's largest container-lifting cranes. Fremantle is the base for the state's largest commercial fishing fleet. Pop. (1986) 23,540.

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