The island is best known as the location of the wreck, mutiny and massacre.
Batavia was wrecked on Morning Reef in June 1629. Most of the 316 passengers and crew of the
Dutch East India Company ship were washed ashore on the smaller islands on the eastern side of the Wallabi Group. The commander,
Francisco Pelsaert, and 47 other crew and passengers set off in one the longboats in search of water but ended up sailing to
Indonesia. When Pelsaert returned to the Abrolhos, he found that
Batavias under-merchant,
Jeronimus Cornelisz, had recruited other men from the survivors and then killed 125 of the other survivors. The mutineers camped on Beacon Island, and many of the victims were buried there. The island, along with the rest of the Abrolhos, was likely visited by sealers and
guano miners through the 19th century. In 1877, survivors of the
Hadda shipwreck lived on the island for five days.
Crayfisherman arrived on the island sometime afterward and established several galvanised iron and
asbestos shacks along with sheds for gear on four main sites. The island is on the National Heritage list due to its being the site of the
Batavia shipwreck. == Birds ==