Probate Valuation in Surrey
Probate valuation services throughout Surrey:
City Clearances, south east England's specialist probate valuation and house clearance company, operates throughout the whole of Surrey. All the extensive probate valuation and related services we offer are available, in the areas listed below.
If you require a probate valuation, (including valuation of fine art and collectibles), or any related service, such as will finding or house clearance, anywhere in Surrey, call us on 0800 567 7769 or use our Contact us facility, for free advice and a quotation without obligation.
We can carry out probate valuations (and house clearance if requested) within 30 miles of any of the following Surrey towns and postcode areas.
Probate Valuation: Surrey Towns and
postcodes A-E:
Arborfield Cross RG2 Ascot SL5 Boxford RG20 Bracknell RG42 Bracknell RG12 Bradfield RG7 Burghfield Common RG7 Chaddleworth RG20 Chieveley RG20 Compton RG20 Crowthorne RG45 East Ilsley RG20
Probate Valuation: Surrey Towns and postcodes F-R:
Great Shefford RG17 Hermitage RG18 Hungerford RG17 Inkpen RG17 Kintbury RG17 Littlewick Green SL6 Maidenhead SL6 Mortimer RG7 Newbury RG14 Pangbourne RG8 Reading RG1
Probate Valuation: Surrey Towns and postcodes S-Z:
Shurlock Row RG10 Slough SL1 Thatcham RG18 Twyford RG10 Upper Basildon RG8 Wargrave RG10 Windsor SL4 Winkfield Row RG42 Wokingham RG40 Woodley RG5 Woolhampton RG7 Wraysbury TW19
Probate Valuation: Other Surrey Towns A-C:
Aldermaston Aldermaston Wharf Aldworth Arborfield Arborfield Cross Arborfield Garrison Ascot Ashampstead Aston Avington Bagnor Barkham Basildon Beech Hill Beedon Beenham Binfield Bisham Bockhampton Boxford Bradfield Bray Bray Wick Brightwalton Brimpton Bucklebury Burchett's Green Burghfield Burghfield Common Burghfield Hill Burleigh Calcot Catmore Caversham Chaddleworth Chapel Row Cheapside Chieveley Clewer Village Cockpole Green Cold Ash Coln-brook Combe Compton Cookham Cookham Dean Cookham Rise Cranbourne Crazies Hill Crookham Crowthorne Curridge
Probate Valuation: Other Surrey Towns D-H:
Datchet Donnington Downend East Garston East Ilsley East Shefford Eastbury Easthampstead Eastheath Eddington Emmer Green Enborne Englefield Eton Eton Wick Farley Hill Farnborough Fawley Fifield Finchampstead Frilsham Furze Platt Grazeley Great Shefford Greenham Halfway Hampstead Norris Hamstead Marshall Hare Hatch Hawthorn Hill Hermitage Holyport Horton Hungerford Hungerford Newtown Hurley Hurley Bottom Hurst Hythe End
Probate Valuation: Other Surrey Towns I-R:
Inkpen Kiln Green Kintbury Knowl Hill Lambourn Lambourn Woodlands Langley Leckhampstead Lilley Little Hungerford Littlewick Green Longlane Maiden's Green Maidenhead Midgham Mortimer Newbury Newell Green North Ascot North Street Oakley Green Old Windsor Padworth Paley Street Pangbourne Peasemore Pinkneys Green Popeswood Poyle Purley on Thames Reading Remenham Remenham Hill Ruscombe
Probate Valuation: Other Surrey Towns S-Z:
Salt Hill
Sandhurst
Shaw
Sheffield Bottom
Shefford Woodlands
Shinfield
Shurlock Row
Sindlesham
Slough
Sonning
South Ascot
South Fawley
Southend
Speen
Spencers Wood
Spital
Stanford Dingley
Stanmore
Stockcross
Stratfield Mortimer
Streatley
Stud Green
Sulham
Sulhamstead
Sunningdale
Sunninghill
Swallowfield
Thatcham
Theale
Three Mile Cross
Tidmarsh
Tilehurst
Touchen-End
Twyford
Ufton Nervet
Upper Basildon
Upper Bucklebury
Upper Green
Upper Lambourn
Upton
Waltham St Lawrence
Warfield
Wargrave
Warren Row
Wash Common
Wasing
Welford
West Ilsley
West Woodhay
Westbrook
Weston
Whistley Green
White Waltham
Whitley
Wick Hill
Wickham
Wickham Heath
Windsor
Winkfield
Winkfield Row
Winnersh
Winterbourne
Wokefield Park
Wokingham
Woodlands Park
Woodley
Woodside
Woolhampton
World's End
Wraysbury
Yattendon
Interesting facts about Surrey:
Surrey, The meaning of the name—Suth-rige—as the land or region of the south people prompts the suggestion that the area may have formed part, in the early Saxon period, of a larger kingdom with Middlesex or Essex. So small a kingdom was bound to have difficulty in resisting powerful neighbours, particularly Kent, Mercia, and Wessex.
By the early 11th cent. Surrey had become a recognized county unit. Kingston upon Thames, close to the Wessex-Mercian border, was a royal town, and a number of Wessex coronations and burials took place there. But as early as the Domesday survey in 1086 the future pattern of the county could be perceived. Only two towns were separately identified—Guildford, the county town, and Southwark, itself a suburb of London. Surrey remained a predominantly agricultural county, producing mainly for the London market. But Defoe, surveying west Surrey in the 1720s, was less impressed: ‘here is a vast tract of land, which is not only poor, but even quite sterile—much of it is a sandy desert.’ Guildford was busy, though the assizes were not held there; Woking ‘is very little heard of in England’, Leatherhead ‘a little through-fare town’. But towards London it was different. There were large numbers of gentlemen's seats, Croydon was ‘a great corn-market’ for the capital, and Southwark had ‘a prodigious number of inhabitants’.
In the first census of 1801, we can trace the effects of the capital on the county. The inner towns were still small—Kingston 4, 400, Epsom 4, 400, Farnham 4, 300, Godalming 3, 400, Dorking 3, 000, and Guildford 2, 600. But Lambeth had 28, 000, Newington 10, 000, and Southwark 66, 000. By the 1840s the railways were pushing out into the shire. In 1851 Lambeth was 139, 000, Southwark more than 100, 000. By 1901 the suburbs had taken over—299, 000 in Lambeth, 259, 000 in Camberwell, 169, 000 in Battersea, 134, 000 in Croydon. The county of market gardeners had become commuter land.
The interesting facts on this page were derived from answers.com.
