Forest Hills, 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:

  • Tyne Blvd

  • Cromwell Dr

  • Kingsbury Dr

  • Andover Dr

  • Pinehurst Dr

  • Melbourne Dr

  • Chickering Ln

  • Stansford Dr

  • Herningway Dr

  • Other areas not listed please call us at 423-802-9141.

Excellent! No comparison, absolutely recommend, best house cleaning service and quality I have ever experienced.
— Siegfried R.

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 423-802-9141 with any questions about our cleaning Tennessee services.

Showed up when scheduled, very professional and offered helpful suggestions.
— Joy S.

About Forest Hills, TN

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Forest Hills is a suburb of Nashville in Davidson CountyTennessee. The population was 4,812 at the 2010 census and 4,866 in a 2018 estimate.

Nashville was settled by Anglo-Europeans in 1780, and over the next two decades settlers staked claims on what was originally land cultivated and hunted by Native Americans. Several land grants were awarded to Revolutionary War veterans. The recipients of these grants seldom settled the land themselves, but either sold them to individuals or passed them along to their children or other relatives. In the Forest Hills area, William Nash received a 640-acre (2.6 km2) grant along what is now Granny White Pike south of Tyne Boulevard. Nash opted to sell off parcels of his land, including a 160-acre (0.65 km2) tract to Henry Compton in the early 19th century. Much of the land west of Hillsboro Road was part of a grant awarded to James Robertson.

A Revolutionary War veteran named McCrory chose to give his land grant to his son Thomas, who came to the area in 1790. The younger McCrory went on to acquire some 3,700 acres (15 km2) in Davidson and Williamson counties, including land along what is now Old Hickory Boulevard. McCrory built a two-story log dwelling on this property in 1798. The property was purchased by William B. Carpenter in 1837, and his daughter and son-in-law Mary E. and George Mayfield inherited the house in 1869. It remained in the Mayfield family until 1939. This is the oldest building remaining in Forest Hills, and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. As Nashville assumed prominence on the western frontier, a road known as the Natchez Trace was created to provide an overland route for settlers returning from New Orleans. Many settlers in the Ohio and Cumberland River valleys floated on rafts down the Mississippi River to New Orleans to sell their goods. Prior to the invention of the steamboat, western settlers had no choice but to walk home through the wilderness to reach home. In order to provide an improved road, the Natchez Trace was constructed from Nashville to Natchez, Mississippi.

Chickering Trailhead, Forest Hills, TN

Chickering Trailhead, Forest Hills, TN

Henry Compton Sr. (1784-1873) came to Tennessee in 1806. Shortly after his marriage to Sarah Cox in 1815, Compton settled on 325 acres (1.32 km2) in what is now Forest Hills. Around 1819, Compton erected a two-story log dwelling near what is now Tyne Boulevard. The dwelling was enlarged ca. 1900 to accommodate the Comptons' growing family, which included ten children. Henry Compton became one of the area's most prominent landowners, with 900 acres (3.6 km2) improved and 400 acres (1.6 km2) of woodlands in 1860. At this time his substantial farm was valued at $195,000 and produced 7,500 bushels of Indian corn, 1,800 bushels of oats, 1,500 bushels of potatoes, and 1,300 bushels of wheat. Compton's livestock included 200 swine, 150 sheep, and 29 horses. He also owned 41 cattle, 21 of which were milk cows.

The Compton estates grew over generations, and by the late 19th century their lands "stretched from the Belle Meade plantation on the west to the Lealand estate on the east." An 1871 map of Davidson County confirms this statement and shows the estates of Felix Compton, Henry Compton Sr., and Henry Compton Jr. in the Richland Creek area. Henry Compton Sr.'s ca. 1819 two-story log house remains extant at 1645 Tyne Boulevard (DV11567). Also on the property is the Compton family cemetery, which contains approximately 25 graves.

Source: Wikipedia, Forest Hills, TN

 
 
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For a free estimate please call Mara Daher-Boyer at 423-802-9141.