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

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.
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!
Extreme House Cleaning Services
We are Harrisonville‘s experts at getting your home back in order! We have been serving our clients since 2019. Some call us “Specialists,” others call us “Experts,” and they all call us “Professionals” in extreme house cleaning.
Hoarding Cleanup Pros Mission Statement:
To provide help in a professional, empathetic, respectful, and discreet manner.
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.
Harrisonville MO Fun Facts
Harrisonville was founded in 1837 upon land donated to Cass County by Congress for county purposes, and was named for Congressman Albert G. Harrison, who was instrumental in obtaining the land grant.[8] The area suffered greatly during the American Civil War, though Harrisonville was one of the few places exempted in Union General Thomas Ewing‘s General Order No. 11 (1863), which ordered the depopulation of three entire Missouri counties and part of a fourth.[9]
In 1972, Harrisonville was the site of escalating tensions between a handful of mostly Vietnam veterans and town elders, which culminated in a brief rampage by 25-year-old Charlie “Ootney” Simpson. In the town square, in plain view of onlookers, he killed two police officers and a bystander before shooting himself. The victims were officers Donald Marler and Francis Wirt and local businessman Orville Allen. His motivation turned out to be personal, not political; he had saved money to buy a farm, but the seller had recently backed out of the deal, and Simpson had used the money to bail his friends out of jail.[10]
The Robert A. Brown House, Harrisonville Courthouse Square Historic District, and St. Peter’s Episcopal Church are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[11]