Your Respectful Hoarding Cleanup Pro in Hannibal
Call 913-380-0609

Professional Hoarding Cleanup
We are professionals, and we take our job seriously! “Pros” is in our name for a reason. It constantly reminds us of our commitment to those that we serve. We offer discreet cleanup services. Your health and well-being are at the core of what we do.
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).
Call 913-380-0609 or email us to get a free quote now!
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.
Built to Provide Hoarder Help
Brian Burton and Jim Clevenger started Hoarding Cleanup Pros in the Spring of 2019 to help those in need of extreme cleaning services. They noticed an absence of caring and empathetic professionals servicing those in need. They started Hoarding Cleanup Pros in the Spring of 2019 to service those in need of extreme cleaning services.
Call 913-380-0609 or email us to get a free quote now!
Hannibal, Missouri Fun Facts:
The site of Hannibal was long occupied by various cultures of indigenous Native American tribes.
The river community is best known as the 19th-century boyhood home of author Samuel Langhorne Clemens (aka Mark Twain). The settings of Twain’s novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn are inspired by this town. Numerous historical sites are associated with Mark Twain and places depicted in his fiction.
Hannibal draws both American and international tourists. The Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum marked its 100th anniversary in 2012 and has had visitors from all 50 states and some 60 countries.[6] Most Hannibal residents enjoy the visitors, and the town at large benefits from tourism revenue.[7]
After the Louisiana Territory was acquired by the United States in 1803, European-American settlers began to enter the area. The town was laid out in 1819 by Moses Bates[8] and named after Hannibal Creek (now known as Bear Creek).[9] The name is ultimately derived from the hero of ancient Carthage in actual Tunisia, Hannibal.[10] Although the city initially grew slowly, with a population of 30 by 1830, its access to the Mississippi River and railroad transportation fueled growth to 2,020 by 1850. It annexed the town of South Hannibal in 1843.[11] Hannibal gained “city” status by 1845.[8]
Hannibal was Missouri’s third-largest city when the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad was organized in 1846 by John M. Clemens (Mark Twain’s father) and associates.[12] It was built to connect to St. Joseph, Missouri in the west, then the state’s second-largest city. This railroad was the westernmost line before the Transcontinental Railroad was constructed. It transported mail for delivery to the first outpost of the Pony Express.