The suburb takes its name from the lake,
Lake Coogee, in the area, which translates to "Body of water" in the native Aboriginal
Nyoongar language. Originally this lake was named Lake Munster after Prince William, the
Earl of Munster, and later
King William IV. The Aboriginal name
Kou-gee was recorded in 1841 by
Thomas Watson and has been variously spelt
Koojee, Coojee and
Coogee. The first European settlement in the region occurred with the ill-fated settlement by
Thomas Peel at the Clarence townsite behind
Woodman Point in 1829, the townsite being abandoned in 1831. Settlement of the area commenced in the 1870s around Lake Coogee on Rockingham Road (the first road between Fremantle and
Rockingham). The current residential area of Coogee commenced development in the 1980s. Previously it was an area of limestone ridge, small rural lots and market gardens in the west and south portions of the current suburb. Denser residential development was limited to a small area in the northwest of the current suburb about Beach Road and King Street. That area was better known as the locality of
Coogee Beach. Some buildings still standing in that area date back to the nineteenth century. == Coogee Hotel ==