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Myers Tree Service – Land Clearing, Debris Removal, Tree Cutting
Emergency Storm Cleanup, Demolition Services, Land Clearing, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding
Myers Tree Service - Land Clearing, Debris Removal, Tree Cutting
Myers Tree Service - Land Clearing, Debris Removal, Tree Cutting
800 Hwy 52 WBirmingham Alabama 35022United States
(205) 961-2777
Business Description
Myers Tree Service is a family-owned business that serves the Birmingham area and surrounding areas for more than 15 years. We are a fully licensed and insured business that offers 24-hour emergency services, tree cutting, tree removal, and stump removal.
The following areas are service areas: Pelham, Vestavia and Mountain Brook, Homewood and Indian Springs, Inverness.
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About Birmingham
Birmingham ( BUR-ming-ham) is a city in the north central region of the U.S. state of Alabama. Birmingham is the seat of Jefferson County, Alabama's most populous county. As of the 2022 census estimates, Birmingham had a population of 196,910, down 2% from the 2020 census, making it Alabama's third-most populous city after Huntsville and Montgomery. The broader Birmingham metropolitan area had a 2020 population of 1,115,289, and is the largest metropolitan area in Alabama as well as the 50th-most populous in the United States. Birmingham serves as an important regional hub and is associated with the Deep South, Piedmont, and Appalachian regions of the nation. Birmingham was founded in 1871, during the post–Civil War Reconstruction period, through the merger of three pre-existing farm towns, notably, Elyton. It grew from there, annexing many more of its smaller neighbors, into an industrial and railroad transportation center with a focus on mining, the iron and steel industry, and railroading. Birmingham was named after Birmingham, England, one of the UK's major industrial cities. Most of the original settlers who founded Birmingham were of English ancestry. The city may have been planned as a place where cheap, non-unionized, and often African-American labor from rural Alabama could be employed in the city's steel mills and blast furnaces, giving it a competitive advantage over industrial cities in the Midwest and Northeast.From its founding through the end of the 1960s, Birmingham was a primary industrial center of the South.