Franklin, 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:
Forest Home
Crowne Brook Cir / Gillespie Dr
Bingham / Parry
West Harpeth / Douglas
Bethlehem / Grassland
Epworth / Harpeth
Berrys Chapel
Champions Cir / Champion Cir
Old Natchez Trce / Moran Rd
Mudsink
Other areas not listed please call us at 423-802-9141.
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.
About Franklin, TN
Franklin is a city in, and the county seat of, Williamson County, Tennessee, United States. About 21 miles (34 km) south of Nashville, it is one of the principal cities of the Nashville metropolitan area and Middle Tennessee. As of 2019, its estimated population was 83,097, and it is the seventh-largest city in Tennessee.
The city developed on both sides of the Harpeth River, a tributary of the Cumberland River. In the 19th century, much of the area economy (especially the cultivation of tobacco and hemp) depended on enslaved labor. After Reconstruction, racial violence increased in this area, when whites worked to ensure dominance. As the county seat, Franklin was the site of several lynchings of African-American men in this period. Franklin was a trading and judicial center for Williamson County, which was primarily rural in land use into the late 20th century, with an economy based on traditional commodity crops and purebred livestock.
Since 1980, the northern part of the county has been developed for residential and related businesses, in addition to modern service industries. The population has increased rapidly, with growth stimulated by that of the Nashville metropolitan area. Despite recent growth and development, Franklin is noted for its many historic buildings and neighborhoods, which are protected by city ordinances.
Since 2017, its two historic plantations have begun to provide extended tours including the antebellum history of enslaved workers at those sites. In 2018, as a result of multi-racial leadership, the city installed the first of five historic plaques in the courthouse square as part of the "Fuller Story", the first acknowledgement of the 220-year history of African Americans in the city. In 2019 a memorial statue of a soldier of the United States Colored Troops will be installed to join the Confederate memorial statue in the square.
In the early 21st century, leaders of historic preservation and city churches have worked to recognize the lives and contributions of African Americans to Franklin and the area. Since the 2015 Charleston church shooting in South Carolina and the 2017 Charlottesville car attack at a protest in Virginia, four local leaders developed a proposal for the "Fuller Story" as a project of Franklin public history. This is a series of historical plaques to be placed at the courthouse square to enlarge the history represented there. For instance, the square is known by many as the site of a former slave market in the antebellum years, when slavery was central to Middle Tennessee society, but there has been no official acknowledgement of this past.
A Confederate memorial was installed in the early 20th century by conservative whites, who have largely controlled the local memorialization of the American Civil War. As part of the "Fuller Story," a statue of a soldier of the United States Colored Troops, to mark the contributions of African Americans in ending the war, reuniting the Union, and gaining their emancipation and franchise, is to be erected in 2019 in front of the old courthouse. This project was approved by the mayor and city council. In 2018 the first of the historic plaques was installed; these will mark the history of slavery, the Reconstruction era and Jim Crow, and civil rights.
Source: Wikipedia, Franklin, TN