As a long established House Clearance and Probate Valuation Company based in Egham we are able to provide our services anywhere within 20 miles of the TW20 postcode area.
The majority of our work is by recommendation, and we have been carrying out house clearances and probate valuation work in Egham for many years. By reputation, and as a local company, we are regularly instructed by solicitors, executors and private clients to carry out all types of probate valuations and house clearance.
After valuing the contents and chattels of an estate for probate purposes, we are able to clear the house of furniture, personal effects and all residual contents, and arrange for items to be sent to auction, delivered to a location of your choice, donated to charity, recycled, or where necessary, disposed of, leaving it ready for sale or transfer to a landlord.
We also carry out house clearances in circumstances where there is no probate valuation involved.
We specialise in clearing large heavily furnished, cluttered or neglected properties possibly the result of ill health or compulsive hoarding (OCD). After receiving your instruction we can clear your property quickly and methodically, and during the process retain any personal items, documents or concealed valuables for your examination. Our experienced staff will make the whole process easy and stress free, even if you are organising the clearance from another part of the country or overseas.
We provide our own closed vehicles, (contents not visible externally, so as to ensure privacy) to clear away all household contents. Parking permits are arranged and included in all our quotes. Our aim is to assist you fully by taking care of the entire job from start to finish.
If you need a Valuation for Probate or a House Clearance in Egham Call us now on 0800 567 7769.
For free advice and more detailed information contact Jeff Avery.
Our initial consultation and all our quotations are free and without obligation.
Private, trade or solicitors references provided on request.
Egham is a small town in the Runnymede borough of Surrey, in the south-east of England. It is part of the London commuter belt, and about 20 miles (32.2 km) southwest of central London on the River Thames and near junction 13 of the M25 motorway. As of December, 2008, Egham is the centre of controversy due to possible traffic impact on the 3 level crossing in the town which will be affected by Heathrow Airtrack. Egham town has a population of 5,724 and contiguous Egham Hythe has a population of 6,345. It includes Royal Holloway, University of London. Egham predates 666AD when Chertsey Abbey was founded with lands which included that of Ecga's Ham, from which the name Egham derives. Egham appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Egeham. It was held by Chertsey Abbey. Its domesday assets were: 15 hides; 12 ploughs, 120 acres (0.49 km2) of meadow, woodland, herbage and pannage worth 75 hogs. It rendered £30 10s 0d. The village of Egham was previously an ancient parish covering land totalling 7,435 acres (30 km2) in the counties of Berkshire and Surrey; incorporating Egham, Egham Hill, Coopers Hill, Englefield Green, Virginia Water, Shrubs Hill, Runnymede, Egham Hythe, and a considerable portion of Windsor Great Park. The manor of Egham, which includes Runnymede belonged formerly, and in 1215, to Chertsey Abbey, and after the dissolution (around 1540) became the property of the Crown, though granted to various tenants (holders) at different times. The Magna Carta was sealed at nearby Runnymede in 1215, and is commemorated by a memorial, built in 1957 by the American Bar Association, at the foot of Cooper's Hill (a small rise adjacent to the Thames floodplain, immortalised in verse by such luminaries as John Denham ('Cooper's Hill') and Alexander Pope ('Windsor Forest')). Another memorial at the top of the hill in nearby Englefield Green commemorates all Commonwealth air force personnel killed in World War II. It was the first new-built British building to be listed in the post-war era. The memorial isadministered by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and freely open to the public year-round. It has excellent views towards London, Windsor and the Surrey Hills, as well as being a place of quiet contemplation and reflection. Egham at one time held horse races which took place at the Runnymede meadow, which interfered with the Inclosure Act of 1814 (54 G. III, c. 153), and the consequent award made in 1817, which divided up the meadow, as the Act stipulated that any enclosures which should interfere with the holding of Egham races at the end of August upon on its usual course must be removed every year. In 1836 the races was presided over by William IV, who gave a plate to be run for at the meeting, which coincided with festivities at Windsor for his daughter's marriage. The races ceased in 1884. The principal properties were 'Egham Park', and 'Egham Wick'. On 12 September 2007 a suspected case of foot-and-mouth disease was found in Egham, 12 miles (19 km) from the previous outbreak found in early August 2007.
The interesting facts on this page about Egham, Surrey, TW18, TW20 were derived from Wikipedia
Hidden London is also a useful source of information about most parts of Greater London.
Probate valuations (also known as valuation for probate) and house clearance services in London and SE England
Call us for more information on estate probate valuation, and house clearance, (including the clearing of very large properties with years of accumulated possessions): (24hrs) 0800 567 7769