Business Card printing for Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, UK
Plus the surrounding areas of:
Stoke Heath
Sidemoor
Stoke Pound
Stoke Prior
Dodford
Bournheath
Lickey End
Catshill
Upton Warren
Finstall
Burcot
Fairfield
Wildmoor
Marlbrook
Lydiate Ash
Tutnall
Wychbold
Lower Bentley
Tardebigge
Blackwell
Chadwich
Hanbury
Rashwood
Belbroughton
Banks Green
.
We deliver business cards and other printed products to the Worcestershire area on a daily basis.
Our goal is to get your products to you in the shortest possible time and price, If you order your business cards before 2:00pm then we aim
to get them to you very next working day.
For Bromsgrove and the surrounding areas we use an overnight courier
which means that you will receive them the very next working day.
Should there be any problem in the delivery due to weather or breakdowns your order is completely trackable
and will be given a tracking number as soon as the goods are dispatched.
This service we are proud to say is free of charge to all our customers ordering
business cards in
Bromsgrove
and the surrounding towns.
Bromsgrove is a town in Worcestershire, England. The town is about 16 miles (26 km) north east of Worcester and 13 miles (21 km) south west of Birmingham city centre. It had a population of 29,237 in 2001 (39,644 in the wider Bromsgrove/Catshill urban area) with a small ethnic minority and is in Bromsgrove District.
Bromsgrove is first documented in the early 9th century as Bremesgraf. Later in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 909 A.D. Bromsgrove is mentioned as Bremesburh. Then in the Domesday Book Bromsgrove is referenced as Bremesgrave. The Breme part of the place name is almost certainly a Saxon personal name.
In the Anglo-Saxon times, Bromsgrove had a woodland economy consisting of hunting, maintenance of haies and pig farming. At the time of Edward the Confessor, the manor of Bromsgrove is known to have been held by Earl Edwin. After the conquest, Bromsgrove was held by the King. Among the manor’s possessions were 13 salt pans at Droitwich, with three workers, producing 300 mits. The King had the right to sell the salt from his pans before any other salt in the town.
Bromsgrove was first granted the right to a market day in 1200, and in 1317 was given the right hold a Tuesday market and three day fair every 29 August at the Decollation of St John the Baptist. Market day changed several times over the period, settling on Tuesday from 1792 onwards. Fairs were held twice yearly, in June and October by the eighteenth century, with the modern pleasure fairs originating from the June horse and pleasure fair.
The next expected delivery for printing to the
Bromsgrove
area will be
Monday, 27th of February 2012.
Other towns we deliver to: