Mandurah Museum > Records

Fish Tin

Details

Details

Registration number
cwa-org-173-wand-003
Inscriptions and markings

SEA MULLET

Pleasant Grove Preserving Works

Louis C F DAWE PROPRIETOR

MANDURAH
WESTERN -
AUSTRALIA.

AWARDED

SILVER MEDAL AND CERTIFICATE OF MERIT,
Manufacturer's Exhibition, Perth, W.A., 1908.

SILVER MEDAL
Franco-British Exhibition, 1908.

NOTICE
THIS TIN CONTAINS
ONE POUND
FULL WEIGHT
OF THE
BEST PRESERVED
SEA MULLET
Surpasses all
others in
Quality.

SANDS & McDOUGAL LTD PERTH

Contextual Information

This fish tin is reminiscent of the heydays of Peel’s fish canning industry. The industry sprung to life after initial attempts at delivering fresh fish to market in Fremantle by boat were thwarted by hot weather and light winds ruining the product. The solution came in 1878 when colonial entrepreneur Charles Broadhurst developed a fish canning business, sparking a series of fish canning enterprises. Among the industry’s main players was Louis Dawe, who started Pleasant Grove Preserving Works, which produced tins like this one. Dawe had started out as a tinsmith to the Tuckey brothers’ Peel Inlet Preserving Works which, at its peak, was producing 5,000 cans of fish a day, mostly for the Kalgoorlie goldfields and export to India. The industry waxed and waned over the years along with declining fish stocks, eventually dying out after WWII when refrigeration and road transport enabled fresh fish to reach Perth markets. It was only then that the Dawe family closed the last remaining fish canning operation in Mandurah, consigning the region’s fish canning industry to the history books.

Primary significance criteria
Historic significance
Mandurah Museum

Mandurah Museum

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