Ulladulla Harbour is a minor
port administered by the
Land & Property Management Authority. The first white Settler was Rev Thomas Kendall in 1828 who started cedar cutting at Narrawallee Creek in
Yatte Yattah. There was a weekly cargo service to Ulladulla until the mid-1950s. In 1873, a
lighthouse was constructed on the harbour breakwater, and it was known at the time as the
Ulladulla Lighthouse. It was relocated in 1889 to Warden Head, south of the harbour, where it is still active. During the mid-1890s, a 4 ft (1220 mm) gauge tramway was laid out to the end of the main stone wharf. Manpower and horses were used to move the low wagons. During the period 1910–11, a double line of track was laid to the end of the pier.
Public Works Department records disclose maintenance of track and repair of wagons at least to 1947–48. Almost all trace of the line had gone by 1991. The harbour is the home port of the largest commercial fishing fleet on the
South Coast of New South Wales.
Blessing of the Fleet festival The
Blessing of the Fleet festival has been held regularly at
Easter since 1956. This is a centuries-old tradition which originated in
Sicily, Italy, and has been continued by the area's descendants of the original
Italian immigrant fishing community. A significant element of the festival is the religious Blessing of the Fleet ceremony held at Ulladulla Harbour on Easter Sunday. The festivities conclude with fireworks display, over the harbour on Easter Sunday and the Harbour Markets on Easter Monday. Although the accompanying celebration was cancelled due to a sharp rise in the public liability premium in 2004 and 2005, the ceremony returned in 2008. It was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, and in 2022 it returned but under COVID restrictions. ==Public transport==