Telford - Shropshire

Telford - Shropshire owned by J Houghton

Having used the services provided by Telford First, we can highly recommend their services. If you need someone to complete your garden maintenance services contact John Franklyn, contact details are below -

Telford First is pleased to announce that we are experiencing record business growth throughout Shropshire. This is great news especially as the country has entered the worst recession it has ever experienced.

We believe that the secret to our success is quite simple,

1.Excellent customer service
2.We are prepared to go that extra mile for every customer
3.We provide a high quality service
4.We are very security aware
5.We work hard to create a positive relationship with every customer
6.We will not take on a job we feel we cannot do to the required standard but will work with you to find someone who can.
7.We will tailor our services to meet your required needs.
8.We are always prepared to give that little extra.
9.We are affordable to everyone, have a set rate and do not charge for call outs or extra for working on a Sunday or public Holliday.

Telford First Gardening Services are affordable to everyone and we pride ourselves on cost, customer service and quality of work.

When Only The best Is Good Enough

Contact Telford First on

Phone 01952 676990

email - telfordfirst@minister.com

Website - www.telfordfirstlimited.co.uk

Advertise on this site. Adverts cost £10 for 3 months. Title to contain up to 45 characters. Main body up to 150 characters. Click on the links at the bottom of the page.

All funds raised from advertising will be donated to local good causes.


Telford - Shropshire Stats
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About Telford - Shropshire

Telford is named in honour of renowned eighteenth century road builder and engineer Thomas Telford, Shropshire's first county surveyor.

Telford's high-tech buildings and modern technology marks it out as a town of the future, and this is nowhere more evident than in its forward thinking approach to shopping.

Central focus of the town's splendid selection of attractions is the Telford Shopping centre. Shropshire's largest shopping centre is open seven days a week, and combines over 140 stores under one roof. There is a shopmobility unit, providing pushchairs and wheelchairs. There are award -winning baby feeding and changing rooms, while the Toy Box crèche provides safe, supervised and reasonably-priced care for children, allowing parents to relax and enjoy their shopping. When it comes to shopping, the Telford Centre's got the market cornered!

The delightfully green 450 acre Telford Town Park, and the enchanting Wonderland, where nursery rhymes and fairy stories come to life, offer an ideal day's entertainment for all the family. Telford also offers a ten-screen UCI Cinema, an Ice Rink.

Telford and the Wrekin, boasts some of the premier leisure facilities in the area. There are several top-class Golf Courses and at Telford Golf and Country Club there is a gymnasium, sauna, swimming pool, squash and snooker facilities. The region's varied landscape offers many walks and trails to enjoy. Beautiful panoramic views over neighbouring counties can be enjoyed, from the 1,335 -foot summit of The Wrekin.

Close to Telford is the RAF Museum, Cosford near Shifnal. The recently expanded site exhibits famous fighting machines of World War II such as the Spitfire, Hurricane, Mosquito, Liberator bomber and Catalina.

Telford is a New Town, formed over twenty five years ago by drawing a ring round the existing towns of Wellington, Oakengates, Donnington, Dawley, Madeley and Ironbridge, together with a lot of smaller villages, and filling in the gaps. It is, in my opinion as an incomer, a successful example of a developed New Town on the whole, although some people, especially residents who lived in the country where parts of Telford now are, would not agree. It has a population of over 125,000,making it easily the largest place in the rural county of Shropshire; in 1998, though, it ceased to part of Shropshire administratively and became Telford and Wrekin Unitary Authority. It has attracted a lot of high-tech Japanese and Taiwanese firms - Epson, Makita, NEC, Ricoh are examples - and people have moved here from all over the country in search of employment, with this much success, that unemployment here at the worst times has not been as bad as elsewhere in the industrial West Midlands.

Internationally, its most famous feature is the iron bridge at Ironbridge, which was built across the River Severn in 1779 by local ironmaster Abraham Darby III. His grandfather, Abraham Darby I, was the first ironmaster to succeed in smelting iron using coke rather than charcoal. He developed an existing relatively small iron industry into the world's leading ironworks, earning the area the modern nickname of " The Birthplace of Industry".

Abraham III presided over the resulting industry at its heyday, when the Coalbrookdale Company, and its rival the Lilleshall Company, owned mines, forges, works and farms all over the district. The resulting traffic led to demand for a new bridge over the Severn, and the world's first and most famous iron bridge, at the town which came to be called after it, was his outstanding achievement.

The transport needs of this industry also led to the development of a complex network of canals, railways and tramways, and it was the author's interest in the whereabouts of these which was the inspiration for this site.

The Ironbridge Gorge Museum records on several sites the heyday of the area as an industrial power. They include Darby's house, his blast furnace and a huge open-air site containing whole buildings furnished as for the turn of the century together with working industrial exhibits. The Museum is also the last place in the world where wrought iron is made, and they export it to Japan.

Telford is named after Thomas Telford, engineer and architect. With its origins in the first Industrial Revolution and its name reflecting British endeavour, it is proud, now, to be at the forefront of the Information Age, which some have called the Second Industrial Revolution.

Advertise on this site. Adverts cost £10 for 3 months. Title to contain up to 45 characters. Main body up to 150 characters. Click on the links at the bottom of the page.

All funds raised from advertising will be donated to local good causes.



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