Do you want to escape the rat race and live in a safe and friendly town? Well look no further as 53 Churchill Street is a cheap starter home that does need work but has loads of potential to build some equity. Only a 200m walk down the same street as the local IGA supermarket and shops you will not even need a car too often. Ideal buying for investors or a retiree looking to cash out of the city and have a cheap Home-base. Fibro and iron construction on timber floorboards and stumps. Timber deck front porch, lounge entry, 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, eat in kitchen, laundry and W/C on back veranda. Ducted evap A/C cooling, gas stove and electric HWS. Side single carport parking plus large rear shed and freestanding gabled rear patio.
All inquiries to exclusive selling agents Elders Real Estate, phone local specialist Will Morris 0448 415 537.
This property at 53 Churchill Street, Narembeen is a three bedroom, one bathroom house sold by William Morris at Elders Real Estate on 14 May 2020.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other three bedroom properties for sale in Narembeen or see other recently sold properties in Narembeen.
The townsite of Narembeen is located in the central agricultural region, 282 kilometres east of Perth and 39 kilometres southeast of Bruce Rock. The townsite derives its name from the Aboriginal name for Emu Hill. Emu Hill was discovered and named by John Septimus Roe in 1836, the name being given because Roe's exploration party disturbed a family of emus whilst ascending the hill. In 1860 Charles Smith took up a pastoral lease in the area, and named his property "Narimbeen", which the explorer Henry Maxwell Lefroy records in 1863 is the Aboriginal name for Emu Hill. In 1865 the explorer Charles Cooke Hunt recorded the spelling as "Narembeen", and this is the spelling which became widely accepted for the place. The meaning of the name is not known.
In 1917 the railway was extended from Kondinin to Narembeen, and sidings were established at Emu Hill and Narembeen. A townsite was gazetted at Emu Hill in 1918, but as all the land near the Narembeen siding was privately held, the Government chose not to declare a townsite even when one was requested in 1921. When a hotel was built at Narembeen in 1922, the area quickly developed as a private townsite, and Emu Hill, just 5 km away, declined. A townsite was eventually declared in 1968.