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La Verne Carpet Cleaning
Our regular clients have been satisfied with our La Verne carpet cleaning job for the past years, and we know you will be too.
We seek to provide our customers with the highest quality La Verne carpet cleaning, and carpet cleaning La Verne available in a
friendly, honest, ethical, caring and professional manner. La Verne Carpet Cleaners wants to develop long-term relationships with our customers and keep our clients pleased. We guarantee to do the La Verne carpet cleaning job to your complete satisfaction, or we will return and re-clean at no cost.
It’s our 30-day, 100% satisfaction guarantee.
General Info:
La Verne is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States. The population was 31,638 at the 2000 census.
The history of this area dates back to the 1830s when Don Palomares received a 15,000 acre land grant from Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado in 1837, which included the land of present day cities Pomona, Claremont, San Dimas, Glendora, and La Verne. This holding was called Rancho San Jose. The adobe which Palomares built in 1837 is still preserved in Pomona as 'La Casa Primera' (The First House). Palomares soon moved a mile or so northeast and constructed the Palomares Adobe. He ensured that a nephew, Jose Dolores Palomares, secured a tract of land a mile west. In the mid-1880s, enterpreneur Issac W. Lord purchased a tract of Jose Palomares' land and convinced the Santa Fe Railroad company to run its line across towards Los Angeles. Lord had the land surveyed for building lots and in 1887 had a large land sale, naming the new town 'Lordsburg' after himself. He also had a large Lordsburg Hotel constructed, but the land boom was over by the time it was completed. It sat empty for several years, until sold to four members of the German Baptist Brethren Church, who persuaded others of that denomination that it would be an excellent site for a new institution of higher learning. Lordsburg College was founded in 1891. In 1906 the town was incorporated. Residents grew field crops, then began planting citrus trees, which flourished. Lordsburg became known as the "Heart of the Orange Empire." In 1917, after I.W. Lord died, citizens changed the name to "La Verne," taking the name of a small unincorporated village which had once been settled to the west. (The name "La Verne" was originally used for their orange groves by two sisters who assumed, incorrectly, that it meant 'the green,' in French.
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