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Carpet Cleaning Little ItalyIn order for us to better service all our valued customers, we now offer Carpet Cleaning in Little Italy (The Little Italy area of Manhattan).We understand our customers' needs for a quick response service and we always strive to meet those demands. So when it comes times for your next carpet cleaning, rug cleaning, rug repair, carpet re-stretching, couch and sofa cleaning in Little Italy, make sure to call us first. Let us show you why we are the number one choice in Manhattan. A little History of Little Italy Little Italy is a neighborhood in lower Manhattan, New York City, once known for its large population of Italians. Historically, Little Italy extended as far south as Bayard Street, as far north as Bleecker, as far west as Lafayette and as far east as the Bowery. As Italian Americans left the expensive Manhattan borough for other neighborhoods in The Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island, the neighborhood recognizable as Little Italy shrank. Little Italy in Manhattan on July 9, 2006, one hour after the Italian national football team won the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Berlin, Germany Some of the neighborhood has been absorbed by Chinatown, as immigrants from China and other East Asian countries moved to the area. The northern reaches of Little Italy, near Houston Street, ceased to be recognizably Italian, and eventually became the neighborhood known today as NoLIta, an abbreviation for North of Little Italy. Today, the section of Mulberry Street between Broome and Canal Streets, lined with Italian restaurants popular with tourists, remains distinctly recognizable as Little Italy. The Feast of San Gennaro is a large street fair, lasting 11 days, that takes place every September along Mulberry Street between Houston and Mosco Streets. Other Italian American neighborhoods in New York City include Little Italy of the Bronx (on Arthur Avenue, in the Fordham section of The Bronx); Bensonhurst, Brooklyn; Bay Ridge, Brooklyn; various neighborhoods in Brooklyn; Howard Beach, Queens; Ozone Park, Queens; Middle Village, Queens; Morris Park, the Bronx; Pelham Bay, Bronx, and the whole borough of Staten Island, where 44.5% of the population is of Italian ancestry, the highest percentage of Italian-Americans in a county in the United |
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