Oundle Van Man

Removals

 24 hr delivery service, commercial removal service, commercial removals, courier, domestic removal service, domestic removals, furniture removals, home removals, house clearance, house removal, light haulage, man and van, office removals, removal, removal company, removal service

Oundle Van Man

14 Millfields, Oundle, PE8 4LF  (Show me directions)

01832 2...Landline    Landline    07762 5...Mobile    Mobile   

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oundlevanmanservices   OundleVanManServices  

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Removals & Courier Services

Oundle Van Man aims to provide a first class service to all our customers. We pride ourselves on repeat business which is why we aim to please. Please take a look at the full Removal Services that we provide in and around the Oundle area. Based in Oundle, a historic and picturesque town on the Cambridgeshire/Northamptonshire border, we are close to major trunk roads including the A1 and A14 and only 50 minutes from the M1 and M6 and we are just over an hour from London - We also offer a regular Delivery Service to Scotland. Ricky Roberts

House Removals & House Clearances

We know moving house can be stressful, so why not let us do it for you. Oundle Van Man and his team will make sure your removal goes smoothly and efficiently.

Light Haulage Services

We can deliver pallets and general haulage door to door, office to office, factory to factory. Any Light Haulage which needs moving, we can help!

Parcel Delivery & Collection

Need a package delivered or collected urgently? Got a big item that won't go via the Post? Then let us take care of it with our full insured courier service.

Oundle is a market town on the River Nene in Northamptonshire, England, which had a population of 5,735 at the 2011 census. It is 68mi north of London and 12mi south-west of Peterborough. The nearest railway station, Corby, is 9.3mi to the west.HistoryInhabited since the Iron Age, Oundle was originally a trading place and market for local farmers and craftsmen.The Saxon invasion saw the arrival of a tribe called Undalas which possibly meant undivided. It is the death place of St Wilfrid in 709 AD where he had consecrated a church as well as being the location of one of his monasteries. The current St Peter's Church occupies the same site as St Wilfrid's original church.Saint Cetta or Cett, a 7th-century saint, is the Patron Saint of Oundle. Very little is known of him, but according to the Anglo-Saxon Secgan Manuscript he was buried in the monastery at Oundle, near the River Nene, around 1000 AD and a chapel to him built in the 11th century, on the small knoll beyond the end of St Sythes Lane. The presence of this shrine and the market charter explain much of the growth of Oundle in the 12th century.

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