Heritage & History
Stories of the Coast
The best heritage & history in Tumby Bay
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.
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4 places
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.
Port Neill Jetty & Foreshore
A tidy gulf-side town between Tumby Bay and Arno Bay, with a historic jetty, calm swimming beach and a vintage car collection.
Tumby Bay Jetty & Foreshore
A Long White Jetty & Calm Water
Tumby Bay's historic jetty and long white-sand foreshore, offering safe swimming, good fishing and views to the Sir Joseph Banks islands.
Tumby Bay Murals
A Seaside Town Turned Gallery
An internationally significant collection of large-scale murals painted across Tumby Bay as part of the Colour Tumby street-art festival.