An Eliot-based landscaping company that has competed with a neighboring firm for nearly four decades has now bought out its rival.
Piscataqua Landscaping & Tree Service has acquired Jacqueline Nooney Landscape Inc. for an undisclosed price, according to a news release. With about a dozen employees from Nooney joining Piscataqua, the company expects its workforce to total nearly 150, spokesman Jamie Storrs told Mainebiz Wednesday.
Jacquelyn Nooney is a Yale University art school graduate who moved to Maine in 1982, and founded the landscaping firm two years later. In a letter to clients, she said she is retiring and called Piscataqua “the one company in the region that can continue to provide the high-quality service [my clients] are accustomed to.”
Piscataqua Landscaping acquires Jacquelyn Nooney Landscape
Owner Jackie Nooney, who has worked in the industry for 38 years, is retiring.
ELIOT, Maine – Piscataqua Landscaping & Tree Service has acquired Jacquelyn Nooney Landscape. Owner Jackie Nooney, who has worked in the industry for 38 years, is retiring, coinciding with the sale of her company.
Since January began, JNL has been transitioning most of its staff over to Piscataqua to keep the teams in place for the existing JNL clientele.
“We have worked in the same neighborhoods and with some of the same clients as Jackie has over the years and this was an opportunity that is very aligned with our commitment to excellence when it comes to providing landscaping, tree care, and snow management services throughout the Seacoast, said President and CEO of Piscataqua Landscaping & Tree Service Justin Gamester. It’s an honor for us to continue the fine work the JNL team has become known for over these past four decades an
Kittery Land Trust conserves 30-acre Nooney Farm
Portsmouth Herald
KITTERY, Maine Kittery Land Trust has closed out a challenging year by permanently protecting a 30-acre property tucked away in the center of the community, just steps from the town’s middle school on Stevenson Road. Instead of a seven-home subdivision, the fertile fields and woodlands of a former dairy farm will become a hub for local agriculture, nature-based education, and outdoor recreation. Named for former owner Jacquelyn Nooney who ran a horticulture and landscape design business on the property for many years, Nooney Farm is a bold expression of Kittery Land Trust’s long-held mission to “Save Land and Build Community”.