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Abbey Decorators covers Hemel Hempstead
For quality, smooth and efficient painting and decorating results at reasonable rates. Interior or exterior, domestic or commercial. We are an established painting and decorating business based in Hertfordshire and headed by Colin Floyd, a qualified painter and decorator with 30 years of experience in the trade.
Painter and Decorators in Hertfordshire
Baldock – Borehamwood - Harpenden – Hatfield – Hertford – Hitchin - Hoddesdon
Hemel Hempstead - Letchworth - London Colney - Potters Bar – St Albans -
Radlett
Redbourne - Royston – Stevenage - Ware - Watford - Wheathampstead - Welwyn Garden City
For a complete list in Hertfordshire Click here
We provide a complete decorating service at competitive prices for both home and commercial properties.
Interiors
We provide the complete service for interiors from preparation of all surfaces to stripping cleaning all walls to washing and preparing woodwork. For the finishing touch we can providing coving in all sizes. We will help you to choose your colour scheme and advise you on where to buy the best quality materials at a great price.
Our experienced decorators will provide a quality finish whether it is wallpapering or painting. When they complete the job they will leave your home clean and tidy.
Exteriors
Your home is your biggest investment and it pays to protect it by keeping it maintained. At Abbey Decorators we will visit your home, assess what needs to be done and provide a free quote.
We believe in high quality preparation of all exteriors before we pick up a brush or roller. This helps to maintain a long lasting finish which will last for years. By using the best products combined with our skilful work force, and competitive prices, we know you will be satisfied with our services.
We look forward to visiting you for your free quote. Contact us today on 07891 340196
To find out more about
Towns In Hertfordshire
Baldock – Borehamwood - Harpenden – Hatfield – Hertford – Hitchin - Hoddesdon
Hemel Hempstead - Letchworth - London Colney - Potters Bar – St Albans - Radlett
Redbourne - Royston – Stevenage - Ware - Watford - Wheathampstead - Welwyn Garden City
Villages In Hertfordshire
Abbots Langley - Adeyfield - Albury End – Albury - Aldbury - Aldenham - Allen's Green – Amwell - Ansells End – Anstey –Ardeley – Ashwell - Aspenden - Aston End – Aston - Astrope - Ayot Green - Ayot St Lawrence - Ayot St Peter - Babbs Green - Bakers End - Ballingdon Bottom – Barkway -Barley - Barleycroft End – Batchworth – Batford – Bayford – Beane –Bedmond - Bell Bar - Belsize – Benington - Bennetts End - Berkhamsted - Bishop's Stortford -Bourne End – Bovingdon - Bower Heath – Boxmoor - Bozen Green - Bragbury End – Bramfield – Braughing - Braughing Friars - Brent Pelham – Brickendon - Bricket Wood - Brookmans Park –Broxbourne – Buntingford – Bushey –Buckland - Bygrave
Caldecote - Chapmore End – Charlton – Chaulden - Cherry Green – Chipperfield - Chiswell Green – Clothall - Codicote -Colney Heath - Colney Street - Croxley Green – Cuffley - Dane End – Datchworth – Digswell – Eastbury –Elstree -.Essendon – Felden - Fields End – Flamstead – Flaunden – Frithsden - Furneux Pelham
Garston – Gilston - Goffs Oak – Gosmore – Graveley - Great Amwell - Great Gaddesden - Great Hormead - Great Munden - Great Wymondley – Heronsgate - Hertford Heath – Hertingfordbury – Hexton - High Wych – Highfield – Hinxworth – Holwell -How Wood - Hunsdon - Hunton Bridge –Ickleford - Jersey Farm
Kelshall – Kimpton - King's Walden - Kings Langley - Kinsbourne Green – Knebworth – Langley – Lemsford - Letchmore Heath - Leverstock Green – Lilley - Little Berkhamsted - Little Gaddesden - Little Hadham - Little Hormead - Little Wymondley - London Colney - Long Marston – Loudwater
Maple Cross – Markyate – Meesden - Moor Park - Much Hadham - Napsbury - Napsbury Park - Nash Mills – Nettleden -Newgate Street – Newnham - North Mymms - Northaw - Norton – Nuthampstead – Oaklands - .Offley - Old Hall Green
Old Hatfield - Old Knebworth
Park Street - Piccotts End – Pirton - Potten End – Preston – Puckeridge – Puttenham –Radlett – Radwell – Redbourn –Reed– Rickmansworth –Ridge – Ringshall - Rush Green – Rushden – Sacombe - Sacombe Green - St Ippolyts - St Paul's Walden – Sawbridgeworth - South Oxhey – Spellbrook - Sandon – Sandridge – Sarratt – Shenley - South Mimms - St Stephens – Standon - Stanstead Abbotts - Stanstead St Margarets – Stapleford - Stocking Pelham
Tewin - Therfield – Thorley – Thundridge – Tonwell –Walkern – Walsworth- Waltham Cross – Wareside - Warner's End – Waterford – Watford - Watton-at-Stone - Welham Green -Well End - Wellpond Green – Welwyn – Westmill – Weston - Westwick Row –Wheathampstead – Whitwell – Widford – Wigginton - Willian – Wilstone – Woollensbrook - Woolmer Green – Wormley -Wyddial
Hemel Hempstead
Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire's is a new town, situated 20 miles of London. The town was located around a Hemel Hempstead old town which still exists. A Roman settlements have been found and it also boasts Tudor and Georgian architecture.The River Gade runs through Hemel Hempstead and is part of the Grand Union Canal. The River Bulbourne also flows into the River Gade
History
The settlement was called by the name Henamsted or Hean-Hempsted, i.e. High Hempstead, in Anglo-Saxon times and in William the Conqueror's time by the name of Hemel-Amstede.The name is referred to in the Domesday Book as "Hamelamesede", but in later centuries it became Hamelhamsted. In old English, "-stead" or "-stede" simply meant a place, such as the site of a building or pasture, as in clearing in the woods.
Remains of Roman settlements have been found at Boxmoor and Gadebridge suggest a settlement was presen for the entire period of Roman Britain.
Hemel Hempstead on its present site is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 as a vill, Hamelhamstede, with about 100 inhabitants. The parish church of St Mary's was built in 1140, and is recognised as one of the finest Norman parish churches in the county. The church features an unusual 200 feet (61 m) tall spire, added in the 12th century, one of Europe's tallest.
After the Norman conquest the land was given to Robert, Count of Mortain, the elder half-brother of William the Conqueror, as part of the lands associated with Berkhamsted Castle. The estates passed through many hands over the next few centuries including Thomas Becket in 1162. In 1290 King John of England's grandson, the Earl of Cornwall, gave the manor to the religious order of the Bonhommes when he endowed the monastery at Ashridge. The town remained part of the monastery's estates until the Reformation and break-up of Ashridge in 1539.
In 1581, a group of local people acquired lands - now referred to as Box Moor - from the Earl of Leicester to prevent their enclosure. These were transferred to trustees in 1594. These have been used for public grazing and they are administered by the Box Moor Trust.
Hemel's position on the shortest route between London and the industrial Midlands put it on the Sparrows Herne turnpike Toll road in 1762, the Grand Junction Canal in 1795 and the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837.[9] However it remained principally an agricultural market town throughout the 19th century. In the last decades of that century development of houses and villas for London commuters began. The Midland Railway built a branch line connecting to its mainline at Harpenden in 1877 Hemel steadily expanded, but only became a borough on 13 July 1898. During World War II 90 high explosive bombs dropped on the town by the Luftwaffe. The most major incident was on 10 May 1942 when a stick of bombs demolished houses at Nash Mills killing 8 people. The nearby Dickinson factories which were used to produce munitions and were the target.
After World War II, in 1946, the government designated Hemel Hempstead as the site of one of its proposed New Towns. The first new residents moved in during April 1949 and the town continued its planned expansion through to the end of the 1980s. Hemel grew to its present population of 80,000, with new developments enveloping the original town on all sides. The original part of Hemel is still known as the "Old Town".
Its geographical position, between London and the Midlands, acted again in the 1960s when the M1 motorway was routed just to the east of the town. This gave it a central position on the country's motorway network.
Above information sourced from various local history sites with special thanks to Wikipedia

