House Cleaning in Charing Cross, London

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The cleaners, we provide, are competent and careful. They can iron, dust and polish or full turn out and scrub, our dailies will do a spectacular job. Our staff is happy to discuss your needs and fulfill your requirements.
Our regular weekly house cleaning service, covering Charing Cross, starts at a very affordable rates.
We provide customized house cleaning service specific to our clients needs. Our staff is motivated by your complete satisfaction.
In addition to weekly, bi-weekly and monthly house cleanings, we also offer one-time house cleanings that include move-ins and move-outs, spring-cleaning, service prior to a big event and other non-recurring services.
We provide the best and most thorough cleaning services in Charing Cross area.
Covered postcodes: WC2
Information about Charing Cross
The name Charing Cross, now given to a mainline railway station and the surrounding district of central London, comes from the original hamlet of Charing, where King Edward I placed a cross in memorial to his wife, Eleanor of Castile. It is often regarded as the very centre of London: other districts tend to be referenced by their distance from it.
It was one of twelve places where Eleanor's coffin rested overnight during the funeral procession from Lincolnshire to her final resting-place at Westminster, half a mile away. At each of these, Edward erected an "Eleanor cross", of which only three now remain. The one which stands in front of Charing Cross railway station is a re-located Victorian "copy" (designed by architect Edward Middleton Barry) of the original, which was not nearly as large or ornate as the Victorian version.
The original position of the cross was at the top of Whitehall, at the south of Trafalgar Square. The spot is now occupied by the statue of King Charles I mounted on a horse. A plaque there reads: "On the site now occupied by the statue of King Charles was erected the original Queen Eleanor's Cross a replica of which stands in front of Charing Cross Station. Mileages from London are measured from the site of the original cross"
The name Charing Cross derives from the old English word charing, meaning a bend in the river; thus, the Charing Cross is "the cross by the village at the bend in the river". In 1839 the Metropolitan Police District was extended to cover every parish within 15 miles of Charing Cross.
Source: WikiPedia