VIEWING BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Here’s the perfect place to park up your vehicles and venture out in the boat, then rest your head in the ultimate fisherman’s bach after a day on the water.
What to love?
Set on a 1012m2 block, this rustic abode may just be ideal for those weekend or holiday forays into the beachside lifestyle.
There's an open-plan kitchen/dining and a separate living area, along with one bedroom and a bathroom with handbasin
The outside laundry’s perfect for cleaning the catch of the day, and can’t you just imagine yourself lounging around in the covered outdoor patio and setting up the barbeque?
There’s scope to develop this plot into whatever you want it to be – just a stone’s throw from Point Samson’s Community Association and park, the social life of a small country village is assured.
What to know?
Block size: 1012m2
House size: 91m2
Council rates: $2152
Water rates: $275.72
Zoned R10 Residential
Viewings from mid-November strictly by appointment only.
Who to talk to?
For more information contact Anna Guillesser on 0428 620 894.
This property at 8 Murray Street, Point Samson is a one bedroom, one bathroom house listed for sale by Anna Guillesser at Realmark - Karratha.
For more information about Point Samson, including sales data, facts, growth rates, nearby transport and nearby shops, please view our Point Samson profile page.
If you would like to get in touch with Anna Guillesser regarding 8 Murray Street, Point Samson, please call 08 9144 2499 or contact the agent via email.
Track this property
Track propertyThe 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.