Bryan Haul Away Service
Texas Junk Hauling provides residential and business customers with junk removal, garbage pickup, waste hauling, appliance recycling, and construction debris disposal. We are delighted to service Bryan and the surrounding communities, and we are eager to assist you with your next job.
If your company or home is overwhelmed with rubbish, if debris and abandoned objects are obscuring your landscaping, or if you're running out of space in your garage or storage space, Texas Junk Hauling is the team to call. We offer trash collection in Bryan and the surrounding areas, as well as all the specialized services our neighbors demand to clean clutter from their lives. Different types of waste accumulate in various locations. Workers at an office building, for example, may begin to congregate around obsolete computers and excess office supplies, whereas a home or garage may need help removing old furniture and mattresses. Texas Junk Hauling will supply you with excellent service that is suited to your unique requirements, regardless of the size of your space or the type of junk you've accumulated. We take the opportunity to get to know our clients, their houses, and their garbage so that we can provide a higher level of customer service that makes you entirely satisfied. |
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We remove whatever you don't need, from furniture, appliances, and mattresses to broken electronics and hoarded trash, leaving you with a clean, tidy space to live, work, and enjoy. Texas Junk Removal is ready to assist you in getting rid of outmoded appliances, disposing of useless items safely, or simply getting rid of accumulated junk.
Brief History of Bryan
Bryan is the county seat of Brazos County, Texas, in the United States. It is centrally positioned in the Brazos Valley (East and Central Texas). The city had an estimated population of 83,980 as of the 2020 census. Bryan is bordered to the south by the city of College Station. They form the Bryan-College Station metropolitan region, which as of 2019, has a population of more than 250,069.
The territory near Bryan was part of a land transfer from Spain to Moses Austin. Stephen F. Austin, Austin's son, assisted in bringing people to the area. William Joel Bryan, Stephen Austin's nephew, was among the pioneers. Brazos County's county seat was moved from Boonville to Bryan in 1866, and a post office was established. |
After many delays caused by the Civil War, the Houston and Texas Central Railroad, which had previously only reached Millican, eventually reached Bryan in 1867. Bryan was incorporated only a few years later, in 1871. Texas A&M College opened in 1876 in what is now College Station, just south of Bryan. The Bryan ISD was established the next year, in 1877. Bryan, like the rest of the country, added a lighting system and a waterworks to its community in 1889. The sixth Brazos County courthouse was erected in 1892, and the International-Great Northern Railroad arrived in Bryan around the turn of the century, in 1900.
The Carnegie Library of Bryan opened for business in 1902, thanks to a generous $10,000 contribution from Andrew Carnegie. A bell that was built in 1905 and rung in 1918 to signal the end of World War I is still located in front of the building today. [5] The community built an interurban line to College Station in 1910. By 1923, the railway had been decommissioned. The Temple Freda synagogue, the first Jewish place of worship, opened in 1913. [6] The town of North Oakwood joined with Bryan in the 1930s. Bryan and College Station are now considered "twin" cities. State Highway 6 was established in 1936 and runs directly through town.
The Texas A&M University System announced in 2006 that a new Texas A&M Health Science Center campus would be erected near the new Traditions Golf Course development in Bryan.
In 2009, a fire at El Dorado Chemical Co. forced the evacuation of 70,000 residents owing to the burning of ammonium nitrate, which may have caused mild respiratory difficulties.
The authorities, however, urged that only "everyone who can smell or see smoke vacate their homes and businesses" and did not enforce an evacuation except for 500 homes in the fire's immediate area. Less than 1,000 people elected to flee, seeking refuge at Texas A&M University, which shuttered its campus for the day to alleviate traffic congestion. Because the chemicals were water reactive, city fire officials decided to let the fire burn before attacking it. The evacuation began at 2:30 p.m. CST and ended at 7 p.m. CST, with the exception of a small, circumscribed area immediately surrounding the fire, where approximately 100 Bryan residents lived. [11] In the end, just 500 residents were forced to evacuate, and 35 people were hospitalized for smoke-related respiratory ailments. El Dorado officials stated that there was never any risk from the smoke or fire. The warehouse, which was worth just under a million dollars, was destroyed.
The Carnegie Library of Bryan opened for business in 1902, thanks to a generous $10,000 contribution from Andrew Carnegie. A bell that was built in 1905 and rung in 1918 to signal the end of World War I is still located in front of the building today. [5] The community built an interurban line to College Station in 1910. By 1923, the railway had been decommissioned. The Temple Freda synagogue, the first Jewish place of worship, opened in 1913. [6] The town of North Oakwood joined with Bryan in the 1930s. Bryan and College Station are now considered "twin" cities. State Highway 6 was established in 1936 and runs directly through town.
The Texas A&M University System announced in 2006 that a new Texas A&M Health Science Center campus would be erected near the new Traditions Golf Course development in Bryan.
In 2009, a fire at El Dorado Chemical Co. forced the evacuation of 70,000 residents owing to the burning of ammonium nitrate, which may have caused mild respiratory difficulties.
The authorities, however, urged that only "everyone who can smell or see smoke vacate their homes and businesses" and did not enforce an evacuation except for 500 homes in the fire's immediate area. Less than 1,000 people elected to flee, seeking refuge at Texas A&M University, which shuttered its campus for the day to alleviate traffic congestion. Because the chemicals were water reactive, city fire officials decided to let the fire burn before attacking it. The evacuation began at 2:30 p.m. CST and ended at 7 p.m. CST, with the exception of a small, circumscribed area immediately surrounding the fire, where approximately 100 Bryan residents lived. [11] In the end, just 500 residents were forced to evacuate, and 35 people were hospitalized for smoke-related respiratory ailments. El Dorado officials stated that there was never any risk from the smoke or fire. The warehouse, which was worth just under a million dollars, was destroyed.
In response to an increase in violence in Bryan, the Brazos County District Attorney's Office implemented a "Gang Safety Zone" in 2010. This move was covered extensively by major US newspapers including ABC News. Cities such as Houston and Los Angeles turned to the Bryan model of gang violence safety enforcement. The injunction designated a 3.2-mile (5.1-kilometer) radius around Bryan as the Gang Safety Zone. This put roughly half of downtown in the area. |