Imagine your workspace in Worcester County gleaming with cleanliness. Farias Cleaning Services Inc’s janitorial services bring that vision to life.
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About Our Company
Farias Cleaning Services Inc is a locally owned and operated cleaning company serving businesses throughout Worcester County. We go beyond the basics, using advanced methods like color-coded microfiber cloths for different surfaces and HEPA-filter vacuums to trap dust and allergens. We train our team in the latest cleaning techniques to preserve a truly hygienic environment.
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Commercial Cleaning Services
A clean work environment is more than just appearances. It contributes to a healthier, more productive atmosphere. Farias Cleaning Services Inc specializes in detailed cleaning for all types of commercial spaces in Mendon. From offices and retail stores to schools and medical facilities, we have the expertise to handle your unique cleaning needs. Contact Farias Cleaning Services Inc today at 774-312-7067 to discuss your cleaning requirements.
Native Americans inhabited the Mendon area for thousands of years prior to European colonization of the Americas. At the time of contact, Nipmuc people inhabited the area that would become Mendon, and Nipmuc Pond is named for them. Nipmuc Regional High School was named after this lake. Nipmuc means “small pond place” or “people of the fresh waters”. The Nipmuc name does not refer to a specific village or tribe, but to natives that inhabited almost all of central Massachusetts. Over 500 Nipmuc live today in Massachusetts, and there are two nearby reservations at Grafton and Webster. The Nipmuc had a written language, tools, a graphite mine at Sturbridge, and well-developed agriculture, including maize (a variant of corn), beans and squash.
In the early 1600s, Praying Indians (natives who converted to Christianity) were settled into Praying Towns. Wacentug and Rice City held two of these villages in Mendon, in a section that later became Uxbridge. These were two of the 14 Praying Indian villages established by Reverend John Eliot, from Natick and Roxbury, who translated the Bible into the Nipmuc language.
Pioneers from Braintree petitioned to receive a land grant for 8 miles (13 km) square of land, 15 miles (24 km) west of Medfield. In September 1662, after the deed was signed with a Native American chief, “Great John” and another Sachem, Quashaamit, the pioneers entered this part of what is now southern Worcester County. Earlier, unofficial, settlement occurred here in the 1640s, by pioneers from Roxbury. This was the beginning of Mendon.
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