Currie was originally called Howie's Boat Harbour after David Howie, an early visitor and unofficial resident of the island in the 1840s. It was renamed Currie, after Archibald Currie (1830–1914), a
Melbourne shipowner who purchased the remains of the
full-rigged ship Netherby wrecked near there in 1866, and used the harbour as a base for salvage operations. The harbour was used for similar operations on later wrecks in the vicinity including the
British Admiral in 1874 and
Blencathra in 1875, the latter being wrecked right at the entrance to the harbour.
Currie Lighthouse was built here in 1879. Increasing knowledge of the surrounding landscape led to permanent agricultural settlement very soon afterwards, mostly grazing beef and dairy cattle. It was, until the opening of the all-weather port of
Grassy Harbour in 1974, the main port connecting the island with both
Victoria and Tasmania. Currie was gazetted as a locality in 1971. ==Geography==