



Helping families on the move since 1857, Over’s are the trusted, local removals experts. Contact our friendly team today for a fast, no-obligation quote.
On hand to help you through to your completed move.
There are no hidden costs. All our quotes include mileage.
Restricted liability is provided as standard.*
Clothes travel in style in our robe cartons.
Slot-on, padded covers protect white goods and furniture.
To offset carbon emissions we’re planting 2,000 trees.
Our trained crews are DBS checked and carry photo ID.
We use recycled/recyclable materials where possible.
Mattress bags are used once, then recycled.
Floor protection is available for both locations.**
6,777 – 2021 UK Census
Beaconsfield
1.2 miles – 4 minutes
Heathrow
13 miles -19 minutes
Flackwell Heath
3 miles – 9 minutes
The Young Theatre
1 mile – 6 minutes
Wycombe Museum
6 miles – 21 minutes
Beaconsfield Household Recycling Centre
1.5 miles – 6 minutes
Comprehensive expert packing services, from single room, specialist items to complete home contents packing.
Short and long-term containerised storage. We'll collect from your old home and deliver to your new property.
Wardrobe cartons, boxes, packing materials, tape, paper wrap. Made from recycled and recyclable materials.
The earliest traces of people moving to Beaconsfield are Palaeolithic hand axes found near Chiltern Hills Road.
Two Roman roads intersect just outside the current town which may have led to later settlement.
The first written record of Bekenesfeld appears in the Great Rolls, held by the Royal Exchequer.
Lord of the manor, Richard, Earl of Cornwall persuades his brother King Henry III to grant him the right to hold a market every Tuesday.
A new royal grant permits a fair to be held annually on the 10th May which still exists to this day.
The Swan Inn is built. The historic watering hole will survive Civil War, two world wars and a worldwide Covid pandemic and is still welcoming guests.
During a time of national instability, Beaconsfield Trade tokens become the means of local currency.
Local highwayman Jack Shrimpton is caught and set to the gallows, ‘He always did the most damage between London and Oxford, insomuch that scarce a coach or horseman could pass him without being robbed’.
Former Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli is appointed Earl of Beaconsfield by Queen Victoria.
The first railway comes to the town.
Beaconsfield Film Studios opens its doors. Productions shot locally include the David Lean classic Brief Encounter and James Bond thriller Thunderball.
Children’s author Enid Blyton buys Green Hedges near Penn Road where she writes a large number of her books.