Open the door and be floored by the polished floorboards throughout.
This gem is a credit to the owners and the first to see will be impressed as well. A very very tidy home that would suit everyone from and Investor to a Retiree or a first Homeowner. Plenty of yard space to build a shed with rear entry.
3 x 1 fibro home with a new iron roof. There is nothing to be done just move straight in, with a carport and a shaded verandah to relax on you can enjoy living and relaxing in this quiet neighbourhood as all the work has been done for you.
Wyalkatchem has a Doctor and Hospital, Junior High School, and all sporting amenities along with a Hotel and Sporting Club. Northam is only one hour away and Perth is under two hours away.
This property at Lot 243 Slocum Street, Wyalkatchem is a three bedroom, one bathroom house sold by Robert Forbes at Elders Real Estate on 21 Feb 2024.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other three bedroom properties for sale in Wyalkatchem or see other recently sold properties in Wyalkatchem.
Wyalkatchem townsite is located in the central agricultural region, 192 kilometres east northeast of Perth and 35 kilometres east of Dowerin. When the extension of the railway east from Dowerin was planned in 1908 land was set aside for a future townsite in the area of Wyalcatchem Tank. The route of the railway and site for a station was not fixed until 1910, and action followed to then fix the position of the townsite and survey town lots. Following the survey of the lots the townsite was gazetted spelt Wyalkatchem in 1911.
Wyalkatchem is an Aboriginal name first recorded for a waterhole spelt Walkatching in the 1870's. The spelling Walcatching was used in 1881 when the Toodyay Road Board referred to a tank to be built there, and when the road from Northam to the Yilgarn Goldfield was surveyed in 1892 the spelling Wyalcatchem was used for the tank. The Walkatching spelling is probably the most accurate, as Aboriginal names in this region rarely end in em. The change of spelling from Wyalcatchem to Wyalkatchem in 1911 was done by the Department of Lands & Surveys according to rules the Department had adopted for spelling Aboriginal names. (the letter K should always be used for the hard c). The meaning of the name is not known.