Cleaning Services in Turnham Green, London

We prowide...
- professional domestic cleaning services in Turnham Green
- domestic carpet cleaning services in Turnham Green
- office cleaning services in Turnham Green
- professional office cleaning services in Turnham Green
If you need complete house or apartment cleaning - the job done right - in the Turnham Green area, you need our Turnham Green professional cleaning services. The necessary supplies and equipment are always included with every service, and our staff ensures your complete satisfaction every time. Our company provides professional residential and commercial cleaning service in Turnham Green you can trust, not only for housekeeping and home cleaning services, but for carpet cleaning and window cleaning also. Our agency is certain that we can offer the most professional and consistent cleaning service in the industry to all our clients. The important thing that separates us from the rest is our exceptional service and attention to detail.
Covered postcodes: W4
Information about Turnham Green
After Edgehill (23rd Oct) Charles captured Banbury (27th Oct) and was greeted by cheering crowds as he arrived in Oxford (29th Oct). Rupert swept down the Thames Valley, capturing Abingdon, Aylesbury and Maidenhead, from where he attempted to capture Windsor though failed due to parliamentary strength there. After this many officers wanted to open peace negotiations, contrary to Ruperts desire to carry on to London, but the king agreed with the officers and so Essex managed to overtake them and reach London with his parliamentary army by the 8th November where it was reinforced by the trained bands and then advanced towards the royalists. Charles responded by capturing Brentford on the 12th November.
The armies met on the 13th November at Turnham Green. The Royalist army of 7,000-12,000 were short of ammunition and too small to attack the 24,000 strong parliamentarian army and with the campaigning season ending, withdrew (once more contrary to Rupert's advice) back up the Thames Valley towards Oxford (losing the possible chance for a flanking movement through loyal Kent), where Charles set up his headquarters for the rest of the war. And so the Parliamentarians secured a victory without a battle, which was fortunate as many of their number where from the trained bands and had never seen battle before.
Charles failure to heed Ruperts advice to push on quickly to reoccupy London before Essex could arrive was ultimately crucial in the entire war.
Source: WikiPedia