Brentwood, TN Cleaning Services
Daher Cleaning Services provides cleaning services to houses, apartments, businesses, move-ins, and move-outs, and deep cleaning in the following areas:
Franklin Rd / Murray Ln
Brentwood Station
Winston Dr / Ethan Ln
Foxborough Sq W / Foxborough Sq E
City Center
Hillsboro Rd / Boxwood Dr
Bluff Rd / Pinkerton Rd
Wilson Pike / Chickasaw Dr
Concord Rd / Lipscomb Dr
Franklin Rd / Concord Rd
Other areas not listed please call us at 615-499-9727.
No matter what your space is like, or how many employees you have, Daher Cleaning Services has the staff and the skills necessary to keep your facility clean. We also work with each client to develop a custom plan so that we can expertly meet their cleaning needs. Whether that means a one time cleaning or on-going services occurring weekly, we can tailor a package specifically for you and your business.
Please call Mara Daher 615-499-9727 with any questions about our cleaning Tennessee services.
About Brentwood, TN
Brentwood is a suburb of Nashville, Tennessee, located in Williamson County, part of Middle Tennessee. The population was 37,060 as of the 2010 U.S. Census, and estimated at 42,783 in 2019.
Successive cultures of prehistoric Native Americans occupied this area for thousands of years. In the first millennium of the Common Era (CE), Mississippian culture people, known locally as the Mound Indians or Stone Box Indians, built complex earthwork mounds topped with ceremonial buildings. Their settlement was part of a culture that extended throughout the Mississippi Valley and its major tributaries, and traded with other groups across the continent.
Artifacts and mounds of the Mississippian culture have been found during development in the Meadowlake subdivision, and at the library site on Concord Road. Primm Historic Park contains and preserves the largest of the earthwork mounds, which is still visible today. By 1300 these people had largely abandoned this settlement; archeologists have struggled to determine the reasons. There may have been epidemic disease, environmental problems, or warfare with other tribes.
Civil War through the 1930s
During the American Civil War, on March 25, 1863, Confederate Brig. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest led a column of men into Union-controlled Brentwood, intent on recapturing this section of the Nashville & Decatur Railroad. Forrest performed a quick sneak attack on Union Lt. Col. Edward Bloodgood. Forrest had cut the telegraph wires, isolating Bloodgood as he brought in heavy artillery. Bloodgood surrendered Brentwood that day, which was a significant loss for the Federals. Overall, there were 305 Union and 6 Confederate casualties. Much of Brentwood was destroyed in the battle.
After the war, many of the large plantations were sold or had plots leased to freedmen sharecroppers and tenant farmers. Smaller farms dotted the countryside. Tobacco became the commodity crop of choice. The population was stable for almost 100 years.
In the 1930s, even during the Great Depression, Brentwood began to rebound. One by one, businessmen and merchants from Nashville bought the former plantation houses. They began to revive fox hunting on their estates and raise quality horses.
Late 20th century to present
On April 15, 1969, Brentwood incorporated as a city. That same year the interstate was built through the area, ushering a new period of residential and commercial growth. It made commuting easier for people who worked in Nashville and wanted to live in newer housing. The Maryland Farms office complex was built a few years later on what was once an American Saddle Horse farm and race track. The Brentwood Derby was run there until the mid 1970s.
Development has continued as Nashville has expanded its economy. In August 2016, developers announced a $270 million project in the Cool Springs area. It was to include commercial, hotel and retail development.
Source: Wikipedia, Brentwood, TN