Mt Magnet area about to boom??? Be Quick!
A good-sized child-friendly 3x1, 919 sqm. F&R gardens, contented tenants, good returns for any investor.
The majority of gold mineralisation (Galaxy Mining Area including Hill 50) within the gold camp in Mount Magnet.
Other Amenities:
* 3 mints to Mount Magnet Shopping Centre
* 5 mints to BP Station
* 5 mints to cafe, shop, deli and motel
This property is also available as a multi-property sale with 4 Sirdar Place!
OFFERS INVITED.
Call now to enquire!
For more information, please feel free to contact Sandy Hou on 0426 251 266.
* Information Disclaimer: This document has been prepared for advertising and marketing purposes only. It is believed to be reliable and accurate, but clients must make their own independent enquiries and must rely on their own personal judgments about the information included in this document. Stage Property provides this document without any express or implied warranty as to its accuracy. Any reliance placed upon this document is at the client's own risk. Stage Property accepts no responsibility for the results of any actions taken, or reliance placed upon this document by a client.
This property at 6 Sirdar place, Mount Magnet is a three bedroom, one bathroom house sold by Sandy Hou at Stage Property on 03 Nov 2020.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other three bedroom properties for sale in Mount Magnet or see other recently sold properties in Mount Magnet.
Mount Magnet is a townsite in the Murchison goldfields, 569 kilometres northeast of Perth and 126 kilometres east of Yalgoo. Gold was discovered in the Mount Magnet area in July 1891 by the prospectors George Woodley and Tom Sampey. By late 1893 there was enough interest in the area for the government to consider declaring a townsite, and the survey was carried out in 1894 and the townsite gazetted in 1895. The railway to Mount Magnet was completed in August 1897, but it was not opened until July 1898. The railway closed in May 1978.
Mount Magnet is named after the nearby hill of the same name. The hill was named by the explorer Robert Austin in 1854, in consequence of the magnetic properties of the rocks on its summit. The Aboriginal name of the hill is Warramboo.