Heritage & History
Stories of the Coast
The best heritage & history in Eyre Peninsula
Matthew Flinders charted this coast in 1802, naming its capes and bays for the crew he lost at Memory Cove. Whaling stations, historic jetties, grain ports and the silos-turned-galleries of the public art trail trace the layered history of the far west.
The Eyre Peninsula's story runs deep — from tens of thousands of years of Barngarla, Wirangu, Nauo and Kokatha presence to maritime explorers, lighthouse keepers and the fishing and farming families who shaped its coastal towns. You can read that history in the jetties, lighthouses and grain ports that still line the gulf.
In Port Lincoln, Matthew Flinders named the bays and headlands during his 1802 survey, and Whyalla preserves its shipbuilding past at the maritime museum, where the corvette HMAS Whyalla sits in dry dock. Historic lighthouses at Cape Donington and Point Lowly, the heritage jetties of Tumby Bay and Cowell, and the silo and street art that now brighten the wheat towns all add layers to the journey.
Many heritage sites sit within easy reach of the beaches and walking trails, so a coastal drive easily folds in museums, murals and lookouts. Most are free or low-cost and open year-round, making them an easy, all-weather addition to any Eyre Peninsula itinerary.
Browse heritage & history by area
38 places
Axel Stenross Maritime Museum
A Finnish boatbuilder's working world, preserved
The slipway, workshops and living quarters of Finnish boatbuilder Axel Stenross, kept as a working maritime museum full of windjammer-era relics on the Port Lincoln foreshore.
Cape Donington Lighthouse
A historic lighthouse at the tip of Lincoln National Park, looking out over Spilsby Island and the entrance to Boston Bay.
Cowell Jetty
A long heritage jetty over the calm waters of Franklin Harbour at Cowell, a favourite for fishing and gulf sunsets.
Cowell Oysters & Jade
Famous Oysters & Southern Hemisphere Jade
An east-coast town on Franklin Harbour, known for its prized oysters and one of the largest jade deposits in the southern hemisphere.
Cummins
Heart of the Wheat Belt
A classic agricultural town in the centre of the lower Eyre Peninsula, surrounded by grain country and dotted with heritage and silo art.
Denial Bay Jetty & Oysters
A historic jetty and oyster-growing settlement near Ceduna, with calm-water fishing and farm-fresh oysters at the source.
Elliston Town Murals
A series of large public murals around Elliston telling the story of the district's people, farms and coast.
Farm Beach
A working beach near Coffin Bay famous for the line of vintage tractors used to launch fishing boats across the sand.
Fowlers Bay
A whaling port being slowly swallowed by sand
A tiny, historic far-west settlement where enormous white dunes tower over the old jetty, and southern right whales cruise the bay through winter.
Franklin Harbour Historical Museum
Cowell's story in an 1880s post office
A volunteer-run museum in Cowell's old post office and postmaster's residence, with period rooms, farming and shipping relics, and specimens of the local nephrite jade.
Haslam Jetty
A quiet little jetty at the tiny settlement of Haslam, fronting calm water ideal for fishing and sunsets.
Hummock Hill Lookout
A panoramic WWII-era lookout above Whyalla, sweeping over Spencer Gulf, the steel city and the Middleback Ranges.
Hummock Hill Lookout
Where Whyalla began — and was defended
The hill where Whyalla was founded in 1901, fortified with WWII gun emplacements that now frame a sweeping lookout over the steelworks, marina and gulf.
Koppio Smithy Museum
A heritage village in the green hills
A National Trust museum village in the Koppio hills behind Tumby Bay, built around a 1905 blacksmith's shop and filled with cottages, a tiny school and sheds of old machinery.
Lincoln Cove Marina
The heart of Port Lincoln's billion-dollar tuna industry, a working marina lined with fishing vessels, cafes and the story of the town's seafood wealth.
Memory Cove
A Wilderness Named in Grief
A pristine white-sand cove in a strictly protected wilderness area, named by Matthew Flinders for the crew he lost here in 1802.
Mikkira Station
Wild Koalas Under the Manna Gums
A historic sheep station where wild koalas doze in the manna gums — one of the few places on the Eyre Peninsula to see them in the wild.
Mount Dutton Bay Woolshed
A grand restored 1870s woolshed beside a historic jetty near Coffin Bay, now a heritage museum.
Mount Laura Homestead Museum
A volunteer-run heritage precinct around a restored 1920s homestead, with a telegraph station and pioneer memorabilia.
Mount Wudinna
One of the largest granite monoliths in Australia, with a walking trail to the summit and sweeping views over the central Eyre Peninsula.
Murphy's Haystacks
Pink Granite From the Dawn of Time
A cluster of strange, wind-sculpted pink granite inselbergs more than 1,500 million years old, standing in a farm paddock near Streaky Bay.
Old Paney Homestead
Station life, preserved in stone
A restored stone homestead in Gawler Ranges National Park telling the story of pastoral settlement, police camps and hard seasons in the granite outback.
Organ Pipes Lookout
A wall of ancient volcanic rhyolite columns in Gawler Ranges National Park, formed over 1.5 billion years ago.
Penong Windmill Museum
Home of Bruce, the biggest windmill in Australia
An open-air museum of around twenty lovingly restored windmills beside the Eyre Highway — crowned by Bruce, a 35-foot Comet that is the largest windmill in the country.