Your Respectful Hoarding Cleanup Pro in Monett
Call 913-380-0609
Cleaning of Your Home 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 declutter process of your home.
Built to 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 Monett‘s experts at getting your home back to order! We have been serving our clients since 2019. Some call us “Specialists,” others call us “Experts” and they all call us “Professionals” of 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 refer to our blog post, Do’s and Don’ts of Helping.
Monett MO Fun Facts
Monett was created as a railroad town by the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway (“Frisco Line”) which came through in 1870 and would build branch going off the main line to Paris, Texas. Both lines are still in existence and operated by the BNSF Railway. During this time the area went through several names including Kings Prairie Depot, Plymouth, Plymouth Junction (when the southern branch was built in 1880), Gonten (named for the local postmaster because the Post Service said there were other Plymouths); and finally Monett in 1887 when the area was formally platted and the Monett name was applied to the post office.[6] It was named for Henry Monett who was a popular general station agent for various railroads including the New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad (“Nickel Plate Railroad”) before becoming an agent for the New York Central Railroad shortly before his death at the age of 35 in 1888.[7][8][9][10]The Presbyterian Church in Monett, Missouri
The community was very much noted for being a rail town and had a Harvey House operating at the Frisco train station from 1896 until 1930.[11] The community in the Ozark Mountains also had a thriving fruit business and was nicknamed the “Strawberry Capital of the Midwest.”[12] The Ozark Fruit Growers Association building, which was built in 192, is part of the Downtown Monett Historic District and is on the National Register of Historic Places.WPA mural, Products of Missouri by James McCreery, in Monett post office
The David W. Courdin House, Downtown Monett Historic District, and Waldensian Church and Cemetery of Stone Prairie are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[13][14]