Office Cleaning in Honor Oak, London

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Our staff offers a wide range of daily, all inclusive cleaning services for standard office settings to executive suites. We pride ourselves on having diligent and honest cleaners as an extension of your employee family. Our company welcomes your business and look forward to developing a long and mutually beneficial relationship.
We would like to remind you of the quality of Honor Oak office cleaning that you are missing by not utilizing our professional service. The agency not only provides the cleanliness you desire in your office/facility, but also the reliability, trust, and thoughtfulness you expect from own professional Honor Oak office cleaning personnel.
Our Honor Oak office cleaning service is supervised, and all tasks are provided in a professional manner. Our only objective is to please the customers with the quality of our service.
The team, we provide you, does more for you, than what is expected of a typical cleaning service.
Covered postcodes: SE22
Information about Honor Oak
Honor Oak is a suburban area of the London Borough of Lewisham that still retains some of its old village layout. The name originates from Oak of Honor Hill, or One Tree Hill. On 1 May 1602, Elizabeth I picnicked with Richard Bulkeley of Beaumaris in the Lewisham area by an oak tree at the summit of a hill. The tree came to be known as the Oak of Honor.
In 1896 the open space was due to become part of a golf club, but there were riots and demonstrations by local people. This fell through, and later it was bought by Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell and made into a public open space by 1905. Beneath one part of the open space that did become a golf club lies a cavernous underground reservoir constructed in Victorian times. The original oak has been replaced by another in around 1905. Other landmarks on the hill are a first world war gun emplacement and a beacon commemorating the fourth centenary of the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
Between 1809 and 1836, there ran a canal through Honor Oak which ran from New Cross to Croydon, also via Forest Hill and Sydenham. The canal was replaced by the railway after 1836, and forms part of the current line between London Bridge and Croydon. Honor Oak Park railway station opened in 1886.
Jim Connell (1852-1929), author of 'The Red Flag', lived in Stondon Park Road (which is on the border of Crofton Park and Honor Oak). Political activist Jim Connell wrote the anthem en route to his home in Honor Oak in December 1889. The comedian Spike Milligan (1918-2002), lived at 22 Gabriel Street, Honor Oak, and 52 Riseldine Road (which is on the cusp of Crofton Park and Honor Oak) after coming to England from India in the 1930's.
Nearest Places
- Crofton Park
- Brockley
- Forest Hill, London
- Catford
- Ladywell
- Nunhead
Source: WikiPedia