In 1618,
Dutch East India Company ship , under command of
Willem Janszoon, landed near
North West Cape, just proximate to what would be Exmouth, and named Willem's River, which was later renamed
Ashburton River. The location was first used as a military base in
World War II. US
Admiral James F. Calvert in his memoir,
Silent Running: My Years on a World War II Attack Submarine, and US Vice Admiral
Charles A. Lockwood in ''Sink 'Em All'', his narrative of Allied
submarine warfare, describe its history. After the retreat from Java in March 1942, Allied naval forces required a forward base for replenishing submarines, then the sole form of offensive warfare against the Japanese. Both
Darwin, and
Broome, were too exposed to air attack, so a unmotorized lighter was placed as a refueling barge near the mouth of Exmouth Gulf, where the Allies were already maintaining a
seaplane tender. Code-named "
Potshot", the spartan base was also developed as a
submarine advanced base and rest camp using the tender
USS Pelias. An airfield (now
RAAF Learmonth) was constructed to provide fighter defense for the base.
Z Special Unit used Potshot as a staging base for
Operation Jaywick, a raid on Japanese shipping in
Singapore Harbour, in September 1943. m Writing of a fishing trip which he undertook in Exmouth with politician
Bob Hawke, British businessman
Alistair McAlpine (1942–2014), wrote of the town in his memoir: Exmouth is on a bleak peninsula of land halway up the western Australian coast. I say 'bleak' because not many people live there and certainly no
Aboriginals for they believe the land to be cursed. They may be right for when the volcano
Krakatoa exploded over a century ago, Exmouth was submerged by the resulting tidal wave. Regenerated by the need for an American Air Force base and its contingent airfield, Exmouth acquired a number of brick homes and a reputation for having the best fishing in Australia. The Australian tourist industry ignored this place for many years, but then the Australian tourist industry had for many years ignored tourists. In 2008, an emergency landing of the flight
Qantas 72 was made at the nearby Learmonth Airport / RAAF Base Learmonth. The
A330 had an incident involving the
ADIRU which confused AoA (Angle of Attack) data with altitude data, making the plane think it was in a 16° pitch up when it was flying level. So the protection measures on the plane forced a 16° pitch down twice and brought negative
G-forces on all passengers and it made them float for about 15 seconds. There were no deaths, but 1 crew member and 11 passengers suffered serious injuries. ==Tourism==