Cooktown has a celebrated and colourful history, being
the place where, in June 1770, the famous maritime explorer,
Captain James Cook, found a sheltering river inlet where he
beached his damaged ship, the HMB Endeavour.
The Endeavour required urgent repairs after running aground
upon the Great Barrier Reef south of the mouth of the Endeavour
River. The town now bears Cook's name and the river
is named after his ship.
Although it obviously wasn't in vogue at the time, Cook was
the first to discover the truth of the trendy saying about the
Far North Queensland tropical coastline being the place
"where the rainforest meets the reef".
Cooktown's background is also closely linked with one of
the most famous gold rushes in Australia's mining history
which took place in 1873 when gold was discovered on the Palmer
River to the town's south-west.
With the incredible national growth in
4-Wheel-Drive tourism, and because of its central location on
Cape York Peninsula Cooktown is the stop over
place for the multitude of southern adventurers making their
way to "The Top".
Phone: 07 4069 6004
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