Exterior Painting in Randolph MA
Need a little curb appeal? It all starts with exterior house painting. You can choose Jose’s Painting knowing we will have your home looking brand new with a professional finish down to the smallest details. Our team dependable exterior painting professionals will tackle your list of painting jobs. Beginning with a complete prep work all the way to finish. Always using two coats of grade A paint to make your house stand out from all the others.
Our crew are trained craftsmen with years of experience whose skills and expertise ensure selection of the right products and applications for your home. We take the time to do it right through careful and thorough preparation to improve the quality and integrity of your paint job. While other exterior house painting companies require a deposit before a project begins, we won’t ask for a cent until all the work is completed.
Learn About
Randolph, MA
The town of Randolph is a suburban city in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States. At the 2010 census, the city population was 32,158. It was called Cochaticquom by the local Cochato and Ponkapoag tribes. The town was incorporated in 1793 from what was formerly the south precinct of the town of Braintree. According to the centennial address delivered by John V. Beal, the town was named after Peyton Randolph, first president of the Continental Congress. Randolph was formerly the home of several large shoe companies. Many popular styles were made exclusively in Randolph, including the "Randies". At the time of Randolph's incorporation in 1793, local farmers were making shoes and boots to augment household incomes from subsistence farming. In the next half century, this sideline had become the town's major industry, attracting workers from across New England, Canada and Ireland and later from Italy and Eastern Europe, each adding to the quality of life in the town. By 1850, Randolph had become one of the nation's leading boot producers, shipping boots as far away as California and Australia. The decline of the shoe industry at the beginning of the twentieth century led to Randolph's evolution as a suburban residential community. Boot and shoe making has been supplanted by light manufacturing and service industries. The town's proximity to major transportation networks has resulted in an influx of families from Boston and other localities who live in Randolph but work throughout the metropolitan area.