Wattamolla is the local
Aboriginal name of the area, meaning "place near running water". That name was recorded as Watta-Mowlee by
Matthew Flinders, but is today spelt Wattamolla. Matthew Flinders,
George Bass and a boy, William Martin had been exploring the south-coast from Port Jackson as far as
Lake Illawarra, in a small boat named
Tom Thumb. Returning on the evening of 29 March 1796, a southerly gale forced them to seek shelter. Flinders, "steering with an oar", thought the dark outline of cliffs ended and believed he saw
breakers, so he turned the boat towards shore. Catching a large wave, they "shot across a
sandbar" and in moments were in the calm sheltered water of the
lagoon, which in relief they named Providential Cove. On 15 May 1797, three members of the crew of the
Sydney Cove were spotted by a fisherman on Wattamolla Beach, having trekked from the Ninety Mile Beach Victoria on route to Sydney, to seek help rescuing their crew. The headland to the south of Providential Cove is named "Providential Point", but was previously named "Boy Martin Point". The headland to the north is named "Martin Head". ==Gallery==