Exmouth, Western Australia


Exmouth is a town on the tip of the North West Cape in Western Australia. The town is located north of the state capital Perth and southwest of Darwin.
The town was established in 1967 to support the nearby United States Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt. Beginning in the late 1970s, the town began hosting U.S. Air Force personnel assigned to Learmonth Solar Observatory, a defence science facility jointly operated with Australia's Ionospheric Prediction Service.

History

In 1618, Dutch East India Company ship Mauritius under command of Supercargo Willem Janszoon, landed near North West Cape, just proximate to what would be Exmouth, and named Willem's River, which was later renamed Ashburton River.
The location was first used as a military base in World War II. US Admiral James F. Calvert in his memoir, , and US Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood in Sink 'Em All, his narrative of Allied submarine warfare, describe its history. After the retreat from Java in March 1942, Allied naval forces had need of a forward base for replenishing submarines, then the sole form of offensive warfare against the Japanese. Both Darwin, Northern Territory, and Broome, Western Australia, were too exposed to air attack, so a 500-ton unmotorized lighter was placed as a refuelling barge near the mouth of Exmouth Gulf, where the Allies were already maintaining a seaplane tender.
Code-named Potshot, the spartan base was also developed as an advanced base and rest camp for submariners using the tender USS Pelias. An airfield was constructed to provide fighter defence for the base. Z Special Unit used Potshot as a staging base for Operation Jaywick, a raid on Japanese shipping in Singapore Harbour, in September 1943.

Tourism

Nowadays, the town relies more on tourism than the station for its existence. At the 2016 census, Exmouth had a population of 2,486. At the height of the tourist season, the population swells to 6,000.
Exmouth is one of the few areas in Australia that can boast the "Range to Reef" experience. The Cape Range National Park, which has several gorges, is an area of and its main area is focused on the west coast of the Cape which provides a large variety of camp sites on the coastal fringe of the Park. Some of the most famous snorkelling spots include Turquoise Bay and Oysters stacks. Yardie Creek and Charles Knife Gorge are land based attractions.
On 22 March, 1999, Tropical Cyclone Vance reached category 5 status as it made landfall near Exmouth. This resulted in the highest ever wind gust reported on the Australian mainland of at Learmonth, only to the south.
Vance caused significant flooding and property damage. There were no casualties.
In April 2014, Exmouth was hit by a massive flash flood, nearly destroying the caravan park and seriously damaging much of the town's infrastructure, causing a severe blow to tourism in the region.
On 20 April, 2023, Exmouth will be in the direct path of a total solar eclipse, which will be the first to be visible in Australia since November 2012.

Climate

Exmouth has a hot semi-arid climate. Temperatures often reach over in summer; however, winters are mild and pleasant with daytime temperatures around. There is no specific wet and dry season in Exmouth, although rain is most likely to fall between January and July, usually with monsoonal showers and storms from January to April and from the northern edges of cold fronts in May, June and July. The period from August to December is usually dry.