Aylesbury 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...
Lynsey, South Shields
I really wanted a female private investigator to carry out the surveillance I needed doing. Durham Detectives provided one without hesitation. Their case...
Pat, Durham
About Aylesbury
Aylesbury Detectives have been operating in Aylesbury and the South East for almost 20 years.
Aylesbury substantial areas of its own heart demolished in the 1950s/1960s as 16th-18th century houses (many in good repair) were pulled down to make way for commercial developments.
Aylesbury is the county town of Buckinghamshire in South East England.
The town also falls into a notional geographical region known as the South Midlands an area that ecompasses the north of the South East.
In the 2001 census the Aylesbury Urban Area which includes Bierton, Fairford Leys, Stoke Mandeville and Watermead, had a population of 69,021.
Aylesbury's population has doubled since the 1960s due to new housing developments, including many London overspill housing estates.
Aylesbury's population was expected to increase between 2003 and 2005 with a new housing estate designed to cater for eight thousand people on the north side of the town.
Aylesbury was a commercial centre with a market dating back to the Saxon period.
Aylesbury was established on the main Akeman Street which became an established trade route linking London to the southwest.
In 1180 a gaol was established in the town (it is still there though has moved locations two or three times) which only really happened in main towns across the country.
By 1477 flour was being ground in the town for surrounding parishes.
By the modern period this had grown into a huge established industry: the last mill in Aylesbury was closed in the 1990s.
By 1560 the manufacture of needles had become a large industry in Long Crendon, a village close to Aylesbury, which was an important production centre.
Nationwide Client Comments