Your Respectful Hoarding Cleanup Pro in Farmington

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Our Hoarding Cleanup Services Include:

  • Removal of all clutter and debris.
  • Hazardous waste removal, including animal droppings and other biohazards.
  • Valuable items recovered, such as jewelry and hidden money.
  • Coordinating dumpster delivery and removal.
  • Separation of items to keep, sell, auction and donate.
  • Cleaning to the level desired (ranging from a hard clean to broom swept condition).

Hoarding Help with No Judgement

Discreet and non-judgemental clean-up of your home is what you deserve, and that’s what you will get from our team. You will feel liberated after we complete the decluttering process of your home.

Getting Help

Hoarding is a serious issue. If you want more info for yourself or a loved one, please visit American Psychiatric Association website and look through our blog.

Hoarding Cleanup Pros Mission Statement:

To provide help in a professional, empathetic, respectful, and discreet manner.

Declutter Your Home

How about your home being the cleanest it has ever been? Sounds good…doesn’t it? That is our goal! The peace of mind that goes along with a clean, decluttered house can be a tremendous relief. Imagine the reduction of stress and what it can mean to you and your family.

Farmington MO Fun Facts

William Murphy, arrived on the land west of the Mississippi River in 1798, when it was part of the upper Louisiana Territory and under Spanish rule. Calderon was searching for the ideal site to relocate his family and, as the tradition goes, came to find a spring near what is now the St. Francois County Courthouse with the aid of a local Native American. Deciding that this was an excellent place to set up home, Murphy acquired a Spanish Land Grant, allowing him and his family to establish a settlement along the St. Francois River.

In his travels back to Kentucky, Murphy died, leaving it up to his wife, Sarah, and their grown sons to establish the settlement, which they did around 1800, and named the area Murphy’s Settlement. Sarah is known to have assembled the premier Protestant Sunday School west of the Mississippi River. Because Spanish law barred any religious services that were not Roman Catholic, Sarah and her students orchestrated the learning in secret.

A post office in Murphy’s Settlement opened in 1817, following the annexation of the land to the United States in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase. Missouri became a state in 1821 as part of the Missouri Compromise. In 1822, William Crawford Murphy made a contribution of 52 acres (210,000 m2) of land for the installation of the county seat of what was soon to be St. Francois County. Murphy’s Settlement was renamed Farmington in 1825, taking the name from the area’s rich farm land.[7] Farmington was granted incorporation as a town in 1836 and became a village 20 years later in 1856.

In the mid-19th century, Farmington enjoyed growth and economic well-being through the building of the historic Plank Road, which stretched from Pilot Knob to Ste. Genevieve. The road was built to transport both supplies from the shipping facilities located along the river to the mines and to move the mine’s iron ore to the shipping facilities. The route was soon taken over by the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway St. Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad.

The first public school was constructed in 1870 and in 1879. Farmington gained the recognition as a fourth-class city–an accolade that was surpassed in 1981 when Farmington became a third-class city.

The Courthouse Square Historic DistrictEast Columbia Historic DistrictFarmington State Hospital No. 4 CemeteryJames Robinson McCormick HousePresbyterian Orphanage of Missouri, and St. Francois County Jail and Sheriff’s Residence are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[8][9]

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