The Western Australian Museum acknowledges and respects the Traditional Owners of their ancestral lands, waters and skies.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are advised that this digital guide may include images, sounds, and names of now deceased persons.

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WA Shipwrecks Museum

What's On

Galleries

Enterace Gallery

Entrance Gallery

Ground Floor

Batavia gallery

Batavia Gallery

Ground Floor

Hartog Gallery

Hartog to de Vlamingh Gallery

Ground Floor

Xantho Gallery

Xantho Gallery

Ground Floor

Dutch gallery

Dutch Wrecks Gallery

Level 1

Shipwrecks Museum

Batavia Observation Deck

Level 1

About

The WA Shipwrecks Museum is internationally recognised for its contributions to maritime archaeology and shipwreck conservation.

Journey through its galleries to learn about Western Australia’s treacherous coast, first European encounters, the riches of maritime trade and one of the deadliest mutinies in known history.

Located on Whadjuk Nyoongar land, the Museum is housed inside Fremantle’s historic Commissariat buildings. Originally constructed to store the food, clothing and general supplies for the Swan River Colony, these buildings are among the first Western Australian sites built using convict labour.

With the creation of the Commonwealth Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976, the Western Australian Museum became the delegated authority for management of Commonwealth historic shipwrecks and relics in Western Australia.

As a result, the State Government funded the conversion of the heritage Commissariat Buildings into what is now known as the WA Shipwrecks Museum. It opened to the public in 1979.

Open
Seven days a week 9.30am–5.00pm