Situated just south of Boyanup, with frontage along its entire eastern boundary to South Western Highway, this prime little rural zoned property was originally part of a 385 acre land grant from Queen Victoria to a Mr James Bessonett that occurred on 13th May 1845. Comprising 3.8565 acres the property is a portion of that original land grant that Mr Bessonett named ‘Boyanup’, the name the nearby township is now known as. It has gentle slopes, good standard boundary fencing, strong soil types, bore equipped with submersible pump and a number of large trees thought to have been planted over 100 years ago. Structures on the property include a slab hut (circa late 1800′s), which was listed with the State Heritage office of Western Australia in 2006, and a stumped timber framed and weatherboard clad cottage that has verandahs on 3 sides. There is power to a fuse box on the front verandah and a telephone cable to a point on the north side. Neither of the structures are habitable although the cottage has had work carried out on it in recent times that has included new floor boards being layed in the verandahs and dysfunctional and poorly maintained sections of the cottage being removed.