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Cleaning services Barking IG11

 

We are pleased to confirm that we can offer you our cleaning services in Barking IG11.

Our cleaning services have been carefully mastered to perfection throughout the years. We always use the best equipment available and thoroughly train our operatives to use it. We follow the best known techniques and methods of cleaning in the industry together with keeping a close eye on the competition and the constantly developing new technologies. We are proud members of the National Carpet Cleaners Association (NCCA), the British Institute of Cleaning Science (BICSc), the ALLERG-STOP Network and the Guild of Master Craftsmen.

Our cleaning services in Barking IG11 include:

Domestic cleaning - regular and one off
End of tenancy cleaning
Move in/out cleaning
Carpet and upholstery cleaning
Rug and mattress cleaning
Dry curtain cleaning
Office cleaning
Contract building cleaning
Computer cleaning
Facilities management
Janitorial supplies

Anyclean has invested in a custom designed business system developed by a leading American software company ensuring maximum efficiency when serving our clients. From the minute we take your call to providing ongoing support we have all the information we need to help you with your query.

The good news is that our cleaning services are available in Barking IG11 postcode area with the added benefit of our company guarantee: If you are not entirely satisfied with the cleaning service, we will come back and complete the task to your full satisfaction FREE OF CHARGE.

You can recognise our clean signwritten vans and our uniformed technicians driving down the road. Don't hesitate to ask the driver of the van for details of our service and obtain a card.

For more information click our FAQ page or call free on
0800 195 1215. SAVE TIME! Booking the job with us only takes 5 minutes.


DID YOU KNOW THAT...


Barking is the principal town in the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham. It is a suburban development with a large retail and commercial centre situated to the west of the borough and 9.1 miles (14.6 km) east north-east of Charing Cross.

History
The manor of Barking was the site of Barking Abbey, a nunnery founded in 666 by Eorcenwald, bishop of London, destroyed by the Danes and reconstructed about a hundred years later in 970 by King Edgar. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1536, Barking Abbey was demolished: the parish church, St Margaret's stands upon its site, where some walling and foundations are all that otherwise remains. The Norman church of St Margaret was where Captain James Cook married Elizabeth Bates of Shadwell in 1762.

Barking was an urban district from 1894 and became a municipal borough in 1931. The municipal borough was abolished in 1965 and the area became part of the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham.

Arms of the former Municial Borough of BarkingIts name came from Anglo-Saxon Berecingas = "[the settlement of] the followers or descendants of a man called Bereca".

Fishing
Barking was a fishing village attached to the abbey but independent at least from the Tudor period. Fisher Street was named after the fishing community there. From about 1775 welled and dry smacks were used, mostly as cod boats. Fishermen sailed as far as Iceland in the summer. They served Billingsgate Fish Market in London, and moored up at home in Barking Pool. Samuel Hewett, born on 7th December 1797, ran the Short Blue Fleet (England's biggest fishing fleet) based in Barking, and using smacks out of Barking and east coast ports. This fleet used gaff ketches which stayed out at sea for months, using ice for preservation of fish. This ice was produced by flooding Essex fields in winter. At first the fast fifty-foot gaff cutters with great booms projecting beyond the sterns were employed to race the fish to port to get the best prices. In the 1870s steamers replaced the cutters. However the early steam boilers were unreliable, and a bad explosion in 1900 ended the history of this fleet.

Fleeting involved fish being ferried from fishing smacks to steamer-carriers by little wooden ferry-boats. The rowers had to stand as the boats were piled high with fish-boxes. Rowers refused to wear their bulky cork lifejackets because it slowed down their rowing. However they wore heavy seaboots, and many rowboats overturned and rowers were drowned. The Short Blue Fleet supported other industries in Barking, such as victuallers and block and spar makers. However many such small companies collapsed or moved out around 1854 when the Thames became so polluted that many smack-owners moved to the east coast.

 
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