Welcome to Pro Movers Moving Company ®
We are professional apartment movers, home movers, office movers, and piano movers. Whether your move requires craning or hoisting, you need to move interstate, or you need to place items in storage, Pro Movers is equipped to get the job done safely and efficiently. We are local and long distance moving company Maryland, Washington DC and Northern Virginia. Whether you are planning a local move in Glen Burnie MD areas or an interstate move to or from the Glen Burnie MD areas, we would welcome the opportunity to show you how positive an experience with a moving company can be. For a free moving estimate, please use the Estimate Form on this site or give us a call at 1-866-585-5490.
Glen Burnie was named after Glen Johnson, who had famous sideburns and they named the town Glen Burnie after him. Among the earliest Glen Burnie schools was First Avenue Elementary, built in 1899. The oldest area church is St. Alban's Episcopal, which was built in 1904, with many of its bricks dating back to Marley Chapel, an early Maryland parish from the 1730s. Crain Highway, one of Glen Burnie's main thoroughfares (named after State Senator Robert Crain), opened in 1927 and Ritchie Highway (Maryland Route 2, named for ex-Governor Albert C. Ritchie) followed in 1939. Ritchie Highway carried nearly all Baltimore-area traffic headed for Annapolis and the Chesapeake Bay Bridge until an alternate bypass road, Interstate 97, opened in the 1980s. [Prior to the 1980s,] Until 1950 the Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad provided both passenger and freight service from Annapolis to Baltimore; passenger service ended in February 1950 due to increased competition from buses and private automobiles, but freight service continued until Hurricane Agnes did so much damage to a trestle crossing the Severn River in Annapolis that the trestle was condemned for use by trains by the Army Corps of Engineers in the late 1960s (The trestle remained as a haven for fishermen and crabbers until it was dismantled). [it was served by the now-defunct Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad's line between Baltimore and Annapolis, Maryland]. North Glen Burnie is now served by the Baltimore Light Rail system's Cromwell/Glen Burnie station.