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St. Francis Xavier Cathedral
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Geraldton
(including Chapman Valley and Houtman Abrolhos)
Attractive and substantial seaside resort town.
Located 424 km north of Perth (via the Brand Highway),
Geraldton is the largest town in the Central West region and one of the
most attractive centres in Western Australia. It has the double
advantage of being the seaside resort for the wheat farmers from the
dry hinterland and, with an average of 8 hours sunshine every day,
being Western Australia's most popular winter resort. Equally, while
small townships like Cervantes, Jurien and Port Gregory have lobster
fleets, Geraldton has the largest lobster fleet on the west coast.
Apart from the Dutch who passed the present site of the
town on their way up the coast (see the sections on the Houtman
Abrolhos and the Maritime Museum for more details), the first European
to really explore the area was the hapless George Grey who, having
failed to explore the North-West Cape was forced to walk from Shark Bay
back to Fremantle in 1839.
A decade later the explorer A. C. Gregory travelled through
the area. He discovered lead on the Murchison River and the mine which
was subsequently established was named Geraldine after the Governor
Charles Fitzgerald.
The town of Geraldton was gazetted in 1850. In the years that
followed the hinterland was settled by farmers and in 1857, after the
closure of the unsuccessful Convict Depot at Port Gregory, Geraldton
became a short lived convict settlement. In the 1860s, after the
decline of Port Gregory, it became the major port north of Fremantle
and in 1871 it was officially proclaimed a town.
It was during the time after 1850 that the local
Aboriginal population, which was estimated at over 1000 between Dongara
and Geraldton, was virtually wiped out. Massacres and diseases were the
killers. It is known that nearly 300 Aborigines died at Tibradden
Station in 1853 as the result of an outbreak of measles.
In 1879 the Western Australian government built a
railway between Geraldton and Northampton.
The town's major period of growth occurred in the 1890s when
it became the major port for the Murchison gold rushes. Prospectors
poured through the port on their way to the fields at Cue, Day Dawn,
Mount Magnet, Meekatharra and Yalgoo.
By World War 1 Geraldton had become the major centre
for the surrounding wheat belt. It still holds this position today and
is an important centre for fishing, wheat, sheep and tourism.
Things to see:
Places of Interest
Western Australian Museum Geraldton
This new Museum, located at Batavia Coast Marina,
celebrates the environmental, social, cultural and economic stories of
the Mid West region of Western Australia and the outlying Abrolhos Islands.
A 75 metre wall meanders through the main exhibition
hall evocative of the flow of local rivers. The north side of the wall
explores the region's geology, flora and fauna. On the south side are
stories of human endeavour which celebrate Indigenous and European
communities and today's local industries.
Hanging above the exhibition is a replica of a Bristol Tourer
flown by WA Airlines Ltd; Australia's first commercial airline. The
company started operations in 1921 a year before QANTAS.
Also in the Museum is the popular Shipwrecks Gallery,
telling the stories of the great Dutch shipwrecks off the coast between
1629 and 1727, including the famous Batavia mutiny. Entry is by a
voluntary donation.
The Shipwrecks Gallery replaces the Maritime Museum
which had a single theme - the exploration of the west Australian
coastline and the ships which were sunk off the coast during the
seventeenth century. In reality this meant that most of its exhibits
concentrated on the history of the Dutch East India Company, the
navigational aids and maps, shipboard life and some of remnants taken
from the wrecks of the Batavia which sank off the Abrolhos Islands in
1629, the Zuytdorp which was wrecked near Kalbarri in 1712 and the
Zeewijk which struck a reef near the south Abrolhos in 1727.
The story of the wreck of the Batavia and the subsequent
efforts to raise pieces of the wreck by nautical archaeologists are
told in excellent detail and the displays of pieces of the wreck,
including a cannon which has been cut so its construction can be
studied in cross section, are all carefully captioned so that the
visitor can vicariously participate in the life of the ship and the
process of reclamation. The displays here are wonderful examples of how
a museum can become a fascinating adventure.
There is also a Temporary Exhibition Gallery is used for
travelling exhibits and is changed regularly and the bookshop has an
extensive range of titles covering maritime, indigenous, midwest local
history, fishing, travel, wildlife and children's topics. There is the
Marra Gallery which houses local indigenous art which is for sale.
HMAS Sydney Memorial
Situated on Mount Scott, and overlooking the town,
this unusual and impressive memorial consists of a large cast metal
cupola cut into the form of thousands of birds in flight, with an
anchor suspended from the middle, all resting upon a series of white
pillars. It commemorates the deaths of the entire crew of the HMAS
Sydney (645 men) on November 11, 1941, in an exchange with the German
raider Kormoran. The confrontation occurred in the Indian Ocean. The
German vessel initially identified herself falsely as a Dutch ship,
then opened fire with guns and torpedo when asked to give a secret call
sign. Return fire led to the Kormoran's crew abandoning ship. 78 of its
393 were also killed.
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The Merry Go Round in the Sea
at Geraldton
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The
Merry-go-round in the Sea.
Perhaps Geraldton's most famous literary son is the
novelist-poet Randolph Stow who was born in the town in 1935, grew up
in Gregory Street, and attended the town's school before moving to
Perth to complete his education. He has written extensively about
Geraldton, particularly in the semiautobiographical The
Merry-go-round in the Sea, and one of his poems provides a suitably
evocative portrait of the town. Its lines include:
'My childhood was seashells and sandalwood, windmills
And yachts in the southerly, ploughshares and keels
Fostered
by hills and by waves on the breakwater...
Brief subtle things
that a child does not realise,
Horses and porpoises, aloes and
clemantis -
Do I idealize?
Stow is remembered under the fig tree beside the
Geraldton Museum where an old style merry-go-round has been installed
in his honour. Anyone wanting to understand what Geraldton was like
during the war years, or just wanting to read a very good evocation of
growing up in Australia, should look at The Merry-go-round in the Sea.
The St Francis Xavier Cathedral
Geraldton, along with Northampton, Mullewa, Yalgoo,
Tardun, Morawa, Perenjori and Nanson, can boast a number of religious
buildings by the famous Western Australian architect-priest Monsignor
John Hawes (see introduction for details of Hawes' life). Between
1915-1939 Hawes designed and helped to build a large number of churches
and church buildings in the Central West. Of all these buildings the
most impressive, indeed the most remarkable, is St Francis Xavier
Cathedral in Geraldton.
Hawes' had already designed the building before he
arrived in Geraldton in 1915. He began work on the building in 1916 and
by 1921 was able to open the first section. The poorness of the local
area and the small population meant that Hawes' spent much of his time
exhorting his parishioners to contribute to the building fund while
actually working on the site as a labourer and foreman.
In 1921 Hawes religious patron, Bishop Kelly, died
and was replaced by Dr Richard Ryan who disliked the church. The
project remained in limbo for 14 years until a new bishop, James
Patrick O'Collins, showed renewed interest and it was finally completed
and opened on 28 August 1938.
By any measure the cathedral is a hodge-podge of style.
The twin towers are similar to those on the Californian Mission Church
at Santa Barbara, the central dome has echoes of Brunellesci's cupola
in Florence, the main doorway is from the French Renaissance, there are
eight Romanesque columns inside, and the strange painting scheme
(orange and grey stripes) is reminiscent of the Eastern Orthodox
churches or even an Islamic mosque although Hawes' did say of the
colour scheme that it was drawn from the 'many churches and cathedrals
of Italy, such as Siena and Orvieto'. There is no doubt that the
interior of the church is as interesting, if not more interesting, than
the exterior. It is truly a remarkable and highly original piece of architecture.
Now part of the National Heritage the building
has been listed for its originality. 'Hawes sought to avoid slavish
imitation of past styles, endeavouring to create character and imagery
through harmonious proportioning and massing. All extraneous
ornamentation - such as traceried windows, pinnacles or carved
decoration - was eliminated.' It is widely regarded as Hawes'
masterpiece and the most original and unusual cathedral in Australia.
Hawes saw the church as embodying the solidity and strength of Christianity.
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The Point Moore Lighthouse
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The Point
Moore Lighthouse
It is easy to forget, while wandering Geraldton's
gracious streets of inspecting the museums and the Cathedral, that
Geraldton was originally a port and that it does have one of the most
beautiful foreshores (characterised by beautiful white sand beaches and
an attractive harbour) of anywhere on the Western Australian coast.
The lighthouse at Point Moor, for example, was built in
1878. It stands 34 metres high and can be seen 26 km out to sea.
Interestingly the Point Moor lighthouse was pre-dated by
the Bluff Point Lighthouse which was completed in 1876. The Bluff Point
Lighthouse was destroyed by fire in 1952 (there is a monument where the
lighthouse originally stood) but the Lighthouse Keeper's Cottage still
stands on Chapman Road on the main northern entrance to the city. Built
in 1876 the cottage is now surrounded by beautiful gardens and now
houses the Geraldton Historical Society's Museum.
Driving towards the centre of Geraldton it is
impossible to miss the beautiful Old Victoria District Hospital which
was built in 1884 for a very modest £1660 and now houses the
Geraldton Tourist Bureau. It is worthwhile stopping here to get a copy
of the Geraldton Heritage Trail which provides detailed information on
all of the major historical buildings in the area. The Bureau also has
detailed maps of the city are necessary for the new visitor.
Chapman Valley
The Tourist Bureau also has copies of the Chapman
Valley Heritage Trail a 100 km driving tour from Geraldton through the
valley which for nearly 100 years (from 1863-1959) was mined for lead
and copper. It is now a pastoral area where sheep, wheat, cattle and
lupins are grown and raised. The appeal of the Chapman Valley is a
combination of its beautiful scenery and the many historical points of
interest which include Monsignor Hawes' Church of Our Lady of Fatima at
Nanson and the Chapman Research Station where, since 1902, research
into the agricultural problems of the region has been carried out.
Interested visitors should contact the station manager on (08) 9920
5021 and arrange an appointment.
Houtman Abrolhos
The Abrolhos islands were first sighted and reported
by Frederick Houtman in 1619. He warned of the danger they posed to
shipping, and recommended a route which would take navigators around
them. Eight years later the Governor-General of the Indies was nearly
wrecked on the Houtman Abrolhos, and he too warned of the dangers of
the area, particularly as the maps were inaccurate. Prophetic words,
for two years later the Houtman Abrolhos reefs claimed their first
known victim, the Batavia. When the Batavia struck Morning reef near
Traitors island at the eastern end of the Wallabi archipelago it was
carrying 316 people as well as bullion (jewels and 12 chests of silver
coin worth 250 000 guilders) and building materials for Batavia (now
modern day Jakarta) in the Dutch East Indies. Of the survivors Captain
Francisco Pelsaert took the ship's boat and with 47 of the survivors
sailed up the coast to Batavia (a remarkable feat) while Jeronimus
Cornelisz (who had been on the verge of mutiny) terrorised the
survivors eventually murdering 125 of them. Skeletons of the mutineers
victims have been found on Beacon Island. What a thought! Survive a
shipwreck only to be murdered by one of your fellow survivors.
The Abrolhos have the dubious distinction of being
the first white settlement in Australia. It is a comment on the nature
of our European forebears that this first settlement included two forts
(which can still be seen today), was the site of a massacre and, when
Pelsaert returned, was the scene of some of the most horrendous
punishments ever handed out. Some of the mutineers had their hands cut
off, Pelsaert constructed a simple gibbet and the executed Cornelisz
and his followers. And he marooned two of the mutineers, Wouter Loos
and Jan Pelgrom, on the mainland - they became Australia's first white
inhabitants. No one knows what became of them. Not a bad start for such
a 'civilized' group of people.
The name Abrolhos is derived from Portuguese 'abri
vossos olhos!' which means 'open your eyes - keep good watch!' This
suggests the Portuguese may have visited the area earlier and named the
islands however, to the best of our knowledge, it was the Dutch
navigator F. de Houtman who named the islands when he made contact with
them in 1619.
The Houtman Abrolhos are a chain of more than 100
islands stretching from North Island to the Pelsaert group. They lie
approximately 60 km west of Geraldton and 300 km NNW of Perth and,
about 10 000 years ago, were part of the Australian mainland. None of
the islands rises more than 14 metres above sea level. They are home to
a rich variety of fauna particularly sea bird life including the rare
Lesser Noddy Tern, the Brush Bronzewing Pigeon and the Painted Quail.
The Tammar Wallaby which is common on the islands was the first
Australian marsupial ever recorded by Europeans.
Today the Abrolhos are home to lobster fishermen
and their families who sustain the island's multimillion dollar rock
lobster industry. The islands are controlled by the WA Fisheries
Department and CALM. There are tours which go out to the Abrolhos from
Geraldton but no visitor is allowed to stay the night on any of the islands.
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Tourist Information
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Geraldton-Greenough Tourist Bureau
Bill Sewell Complex
P.O. Box 187
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3999
Facsimile: (08) 9964 2445
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Motels
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African Reef Resort Motel/Hotel
5 Broadhead Ave
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 5566
Rating: ****
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Batavia Motor Inn
54 Fitzgerald St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3500, 008 014 628
Facsimile: (08) 9964 1061
Rating: ***1/2
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Comfort Inn Geraldton
107 Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 4777
Rating: ****
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Mercure Inn Geraldton
Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 2455, 1300 656 585
Facsimile: (08) 9921 5830
Rating: ***1/2
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Sun City Motel-Geraldton
137 Cathedral St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 6111
Facsimile: (08) 9921 6126
Rating: ***1/2
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Best Western Hospitality Inn
Cathedral Ave
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1422
Facsimile: (08) 9921 1239
Rating: ***1/2
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Hotels
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Colonial Hotel
Fitzgerald St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 4444
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Geraldton Hotel
19 Gregory St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3700
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Ocean Centre Hotel
Foreshore Dve
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 7777
Rating: ****
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Queens Motor Hotel
Durlacher St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1064
Rating: **
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Victoria Hotel
Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1133
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Wintersun Hotel/Motel
41 Chapman Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9923 1211, 1800 642 244
Facsimile: (08) 9923 1411
Rating: ***
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Motels
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Wintersun Hotel/Motel
41 Chapman Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9923 1211, 1800 642 244
Facsimile: (08) 9923 1411
Rating: ***
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Apartments
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Broadwater Marina Apartments
221 Foreshore Dve
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9956 1300
Facsimile: (08) 9956 1400
Rating: ****1/2
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Intown Apartments
75 Eastern Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 1750, 0418 555 566
Facsimile: (08) 9964 8750
Rating: ***1/2
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Holiday Homes & Units
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Abrolhos Reef Lodge
126 Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3811
Facsimile: (08) 9921 3005
Rating: ***1/2
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Geraldton's Ocean West Units
1 Hedda Way
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1047
Facsimile: (08) 9923 9628
Rating: ***
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Greenwood Lodge
Cnr Brand Hwy & Durlacher St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 5666
Facsimile: (08) 9964 5665
Rating: **1/2
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Mahomets Village Holiday Units
Willcock Dve
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 6652
Facsimile: (08) 9921 8446
Rating: ****
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Cottages & Cabins
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Geraldton Ocean West Holiday Cottages
1 Hadda Way
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1047
Facsimile: (08) 9921 1047
Rating: ***
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Lodges & Chalets
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Abrolhos Reef Lodge
126 Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3811
Rating: ***
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Goodwood Lodge
Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 5666
Facsimile: (08) 9964 5665
Rating: ***
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Caravan Parks
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Drummond Cove Holiday Park
North West Coastal Hwy
Drummond Cove
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9938 2524
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Greenough Rivermouth Caravan Park
Cnr Hull & Cape Burney St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (099) 64 9845
Facsimile: (08) 9921 5845
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Belair Gardens Caravan Park
Willcock Dve
Point Moore
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1997
Rating: ***
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Separation Point Caravan Park
Cnr Portway & Separation Way
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 2763
Rating: ***
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Sun City Tourist Park
Bosley St
Sunset Beach
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9938 1655
Facsimile: (08) 9938 1850
Rating: ****
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Swagman Caravan Park
Lot 3 Halls Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9938 1222
Rating: ***
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Tarcoola Caravan Park
5 Broadhead Ave
Mt. Tarcoola
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3333
Rating: ***
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Restaurants
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African Reef Resort Motel/Hotel
5 Broadhead Ave
Tarcoola Beach
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 5566
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Batavia Motor Inn
54 Fitzgerald St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3500, 008 014 628
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Beach Break Bar & Grill
166 Chapman Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 3382
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Boatshed Seafood Restaurant
357 Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 5500
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Club Sun City Resort
137 Cathedral St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 6111
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Geraldton Hotel
19 Gregory St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 3700
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Geraldton Motor Inn
107 Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 4777
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Hospitality Inn
Cathedral Ave
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1422
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Jade House Chinese Restaurant
57 Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 1222
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La Mexita
56 Durlacher St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 8110
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Lo Faro's Restaurant
137 Cathedral Ave
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 6111
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Mercure Inn Geraldton
Brand Hwy
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 2455
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Mercure Wintersun Hotel
41 Chapman Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9923 1211
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Ocean Centre Hotel
Foreshore Dve
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 7777
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Queens Motor Hotel
Durlacher St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1064
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Rose Chinese Restaurant
9 Forrest St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 5645
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Skeetas Garden Restaurant
9 George Rd
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 1619
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Tanti's Restaurant
174 Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 2311
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The Lemon Grass Restaurant
18 Snowdon St
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 1172
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Victoria Hotel
Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9921 1721
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Cafés
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Topolini's Caffe
158 Marine Tce
Geraldton
WA
6530
Telephone: (08) 9964 5866
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