Peoria Emergency Tree Services
Call (623) 572-2945 for a free consultation if you have an Peoria, AZ emergency tree services need. We have over 30 years of experience handling tree emergencies nationwide.
Call AAA Emergency Tree Service in Peoria if:
- You have a tree or a branch that's fallen or is just about ready to fall and you need help now.
- A builder or property owner has tree, limb or stump in the way of construction.
- A Realtor or property owner needs tree trimming for a closing, open house or insurance- related incident.
- An out-of-town property owner needs work done while they're in town
- Today is the day to tackle that tree trimming, tree removal or stump removal project.
- A cat's in a tree and needs to be rescued.
We offer our clients comprehensive Peoria emergency tree servicess:
- Technical competence to handle any Peoria emergency tree services need.
- Equipment and skill to handle difficult jobs - day or night.
- The ability to respond 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, Nationwide.
- Fair and reasonable charges.
- An intention to deliver "more than expected" results on every project.
The AAA Peoria emergency tree services Process
The process starts with your call to us letting us know all the pertinent information about your Peoria emergency tree services project. After we have this info we will have our local Network Contractor call you as soon as its' possible, usually within 10 to 15 minutes from when you call. At that time they will arrange a time to meet with you, access your tree situation and give you a price and a time line as to when the project can be completed. With your acceptance they will get the project under way. When the project is completed, AAA Peoria emergency tree services will follow up with you to make sure everything has been done to your complete satisfaction and with this goal being accomplished allows you to move on with your life with peace of mind.
FAQs We Can Answer With Just a Phone Call
- Why trim trees?
- What is a complete trim?
- What is a safety trim?
- What about hauling and cleanup,is that included?
- What do you do you do with the trees or branches when you finish?
- The tree that I have is in the back yard,don't you need a bucket truck to trim my tree?
- My tree is getting too tall, can you top it?
- What are the acceptable reasons for removing a tree?
- My tree doesn't look like it's doing very well and I'm not sure what to do,what your suggestion?
Contact Peoria emergency tree services today at (623) 572-2945 for a free consultation from an emergency tree service expert.
Peoria emergency tree services - Peoria Tree Services
Peoria, Arizona
Location in Maricopa County and the state of Arizona
Coordinates: 33°34′57″N 112°14′19″WCoordinates: 33°34′57″N 112°14′19″W
Country United States
State Arizona
Counties Maricopa, Yavapai
Area
City 141.7 sq mi (366.9 km2)
Land 138.2 sq mi (358.0 km2)
Water 3.5 sq mi (9.0 km2)
Elevation 1,142 ft (348 m)
Population (2010)
City 154,054
Density 975.3/sq mi (376.7/km2)
Metro 4,536,069 (2,007) Suburb of Greater Phoenix Metropolitan Area
Time zone MST (no DST) (UTC-7)
ZIP codes 85345, 85381, 85382, 84583, 85373 (Sun City), 85387 (Morristown)
Area code(s) 623 and 928
Peoria is a city in Maricopa and Yavapai counties in the U.S. state of Arizona. Located primarily in Maricopa County, it is a major suburb of Phoenix. According to 2010 Census Bureau releases, the population of the city is 154,065.[3] Peoria is currently the sixth largest city in Arizona for land area, and the ninth largest for population. It was named after Peoria, Illinois. (The word peoria is a corruption of the Illini word for “prairie fire”. Peoria is now larger in population than its namesake. It is the spring training home of the San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners who share the Peoria Sports Complex. In July 2008, Money magazine listed Peoria in its "Top 100 Places to Live".
Peoria sits on flat gently sloping desert terrain in the Salt River Valley, and extends into the foothills of the mountains to the north. Seasonal rainfall and runoff from mountain snowmelt filled the Salt River, at times flooding the valley and wiping out months of backbreaking labor. If the area was to become habitable and productive all year, the cycle of flood and drought had to be replaced with a reliable supply of water that could be controlled year-round. The pioneers turned to irrigation. In 1868 John W. “Jack” Swilling organized a group of men to dig the first modern irrigation ditch in the Salt River Valley. Their success enticed more people to settle in the area and reap the benefits of a revitalized irrigation system.
By 1872, there were eight thousand acres (32 kmē) of land under cultivation in the valley and a thriving community had been built along the Salt River. Over the years irrigation companies sprung up and in the next three years three canal systems—the Maricopa, Grand, and Salt River Valley—were constructed, each allowing sustaining growth in the Valley. Visionary settlers began to imagine the potential income to be had by reclaiming the rich desert lying higher up the slope above the recently completed Grand Canal; in 1882, the Arizona Canal Company was organized to do just that. The proposed canal would be larger than its approximately 80,000 acres (320 km2)—including the site that would soon be Peoria—to a more consistent and regulated water system.
The Arizona Canal Company tapped William J. Murphy, a former Union Army officer, to head construction on the 41-mile (66 km) canal. The young engineer from Illinois had just completed the grading of a stretch of the Atlantic and Pacific Railway (which later became the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway). Unable to pay Murphy in cash, the canal company offered him land and water rights to a large amount of property as compensation. With vision and foresight, he accepted, and in 1885 the Arizona Canal was completed.
Murphy returned to Illinois to recruit settlers to transform the land into a sustainable farming community. Several residents of Peoria, Illinois, were enticed by descriptions of the area’s climate and agricultural potential and soon purchased 5,000 acres (20 km2) among them. Four farming families left Illinois that fall to relocate to what is now Peoria. Before erecting simple adobe homes, the settlers lived in large canvas tents. Peoria stood alone fourteen miles (21 km) from Phoenix, at the time a frontier city of about 3,500 people. An old desert frightening road connecting Phoenix to the Hassayampa River near present-day Wickenburg was the only major transportation route in the area until 1887, when a new road was laid out. This 100-foot-wide (30 m) thoroughfare was named Grand Avenue, angled through the newly designed town sites of Alhambra, Glendale, and Peoria and quickly became the main route from Phoenix to Vulture Mine. The actual Peoria town site was owned by Joseph B. Greenhut and Deloss S. Brown. In 1890, the two men from Peoria, Illinois, acquired four sections of land from the government through the Desert Lands Act. They filed Peoria’s plot map with the Maricopa County recorder on May 24, 1897, naming the settlement after their hometown.
The original plot map of Peoria included east and west streets (from south to north) Monroe, Madison, Jefferson, Washington, Jackson, Lincoln, Grant, and Van Buren. Streets going north and south were (from west to east) Almond (present-day 85th Avenue), Peach (present-day 84th Avenue), Orange (present-day 83rd Avenue), Vine (present-day 82nd Avenue), Walnut (present-day 81st Avenue), the plot was roughly from present-day Peoria and 85th avenues to Monroe Street and 85th Avenue to Monroe Street and 81st Avenue to 81st Avenue and south of the Desert Cove alignment.
As soon as the proposed Peoria town site was surveyed a hand-dug water well was sunk in 1889 on the public right-of-way at the intersection of Grand Avenue and Washington Street. A “town well” provided water for local residents as well as the traveling public. Five years later the well was refashioned into a water tower and tank standing 89 feet (27 m) high. A social gathering place as well as source of water, the tower seemed to symbolize the young settlement’s growing sense of civic pride. On August 4, 1888 the Territory of Peoria, Arizona was granted a post office in its name and served a population of twenty-seven. Maricopa County supervisors defined the boundaries for School District Eleven, comprising forty-nine square miles, and the first class took place in an unoccupied brick store that faced north on Washington Street until Peoria’s first school building, a one-room structure completed in 1891. Attendance was erratic and thanks to a wagon full of nine children the district in question by county officials was saved.



