House plus granny flat creates loads of opportunity. You could rent either residence out for extra income while living there. Move the kids out to the granny flat or keep it for guest house.
Property Features:
Main residence 3 Bedroom, 2 bathrooms (Ensuite)
Self contained Granny flat
Front veranda
Undercover parking for multiple vehicles
Rear entertaining area and established yard
Good sized bedrooms
Double concrete driveway extending to rear
Built in robes to bedrooms
Air-conditioning throughout main house and granny flat
Great location – 400m from the beach and boat ramp
852sqm land area
Loads of parking an laydown.
Tie downs in driveway to secure boat/caravan
Contact the Rob Sleator Sales Team today! Rob and Robyn will assist with your enquiry.
This property at 1 Macleod Street, Point Samson is a five bedroom, three bathroom house sold by Rob Sleator and Robyn Bredenkamp at Pilbara Real Estate on 05 Jun 2020.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other five bedroom properties for sale in Point Samson or see other recently sold properties in Point Samson.
The townsite of Point Samson is located on the Pilbara coast, 1579 kilometres north of Perth and 18 kilometres north of Roebourne. By around 1900 the nearby port of Cossack was beginning to silt up and was inconvenient for the shipping of stock. In 1902/03 the government erected a jetty into deeper water at Point Samson, and this was proposed to be the port for the area. There was soon demand for lots at Point Samson, a tramline was erected to the jetty from Roebourne, but the survey and selling of lots was delayed because of the impact of Point Samson replacing Cossack. The townsite was finally gazetted as Point Sampson in 1909.
The name Point Samson honours Mr Michael Samson, a member of a prominent Fremantle family. The point was named during Walter Padbury's expedition to Nicol Bay in 1863. Mr Samson was the second officer of their ship, the "Tien Tsin". The point was misspelled on maps as Sampson, and this error persisted for many years, including being used when the townsite was gazetted in 1909. The error was brought to the governments attention by Michael samson's widow in 1918, and both the point and the townsite were corrected to Point Samson in April 1918.