Crewe Detectives experienced management team and highly skilled private investigators ensure that your case is carried out professionally and efficiently.
Durham Detectives did a really thorough job, providing me with high quality photographic evidence and even DVD footage. They left no stone unturned, to get the...
Bob, Co. Durham
I was pleasantly surprised to find Newcastle Detectives not only the most competitive in price, but second to none when it came to customer service. Top marks...
Geoff, Newcastle
My daughter moved out after an argument with myself and my new partner. I didn’t hear from her for months. I thought, given time, she would get in touch again...
Val, Whitley Bay
I just wanted to know what my partner was doing online every night. He said it was work, but he was staying up into the early hours of the morning, even at...
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I really wanted a female private investigator to carry out the surveillance I needed doing. Durham Detectives provided one without hesitation. Their case...
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About Crewe
Crewe Detectives have been operating in Crewe and the North West for almost 20 years.
A planned redevelopment of Crewe's town centre,including the current Bus Station and main shopping area have currently been abandoned because of 'difficult economic conditions', according to the former developers Modus.
Crewe is a railway town within the unitary authority area of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England.
According to the 2001 census the urban area had a population of 67,683.
Crewe is perhaps best known as a large railway junction and home to Crewe Works.
Crewe was not formally planned out until 1843 by Joseph Locke.
Crewe was thus named after the railway station, rather than the other way round.
Crewe was founded in the township of Monks Coppenhall which, with the township of Church Coppenhall, formed the ancient parish of Coppenhall.
Crewe's railway station was named after the township of Crewe.
Until the Grand Junction Railway company chose Crewe as the site for its locomotive works and railway station in the late 1830s, Crewe was a village with a population of just 70 residents.
Winsford, seven miles to the north of Crewe, had rejected an earlier proposal, as had local landowners in neighbouring Nantwich, four miles away.
Crewe railway station was built in fields near to Crewe Hall and was completed in 1837.
Crewe has a large park, Queen's Park, the land for which was donated by the London and North Western Railway.
Bill Bryson described Crewe as 'the armpit of Cheshire' in his 1995 book 'Notes from a Small Island'.
Crewe is well represented with Supermarkets, Asda, Tesco, and Morrison's all enjoying representation.
Crewe's Nightlife is well below average, and the 6,000 students at MMU, tend to stay on campus.
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