If you live in the following areas, please reach out to us soon: Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, Cape Coral, Bonita Springs, North Port, Punta Gorda, Estero, and Naples. Fill out the Free Claims Consult form.

We are currently helping business owners and homeowners throughout Southwest Florida with their insurance claims from Hurricane Ian.

We serve Greenacres, Florida homeowners, condominium associations, property managers, and business owners with hurricane and wind damage insurance claims in the following neighborhoods:

  • 52nd Dr S

  • Lantana Rd

  • Landings Blvd

  • River Bridge Blvd

  • Palm Beach Farms

  • Maplewood Dr

  • Loggers Run Rd

  • Melaleuca Ln

  • Haverhill Rd

  • Marco Ct

  • Colonial Blvd

  • Santa Catalina

  • Purdy Ln

  • Pinehurst Dr

  • Oakmont Dr

  • Other areas not listed. Please call us us at 561-408-5533.

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Please contact us immediately for a Free Claims Evaluation for hurricane and wind damages. Call 561-408-5533 or fill out the form.

My team is here to help you get the most money for your insurance claims. We work for you!” — Marc Lancaric

Global Patriot Adjusters, LLC
Marc Lancaric, Field Team Manager/ President


Global Patriot Adjusters is a company built on the single goal of bringing every dollar deserved to clients from an insurance claim. We maintain the best reputation in the Public Insurance Adjuster business because we take every claim for every client as a project with personal ownership and accountability. In cases where hurricanes and tropical storms appear out of nowhere and a bad accident happens, someone needs to be in your corner fighting for YOU!


 

RECENT INSURANCE CLAIM: MAJOR Hurricane flooding business damage

 
 

RECENT INSURANCE CLAIM: major home/condo mold damage

 

About Greenacres, Florida

Greenacres is a city in central Palm Beach CountyFlorida, United States. The population was 27,569 at the 2000 census. In 2010, the population recorded by the U.S. Census Bureau was 37,573.

History

In 1909, Frederick E. Bryant – a British agriculturalist, – Harold J. Bryant, and William Greenwood of the Palm Beach Farms Company in Colorado, bought thousands of acres of land in the Everglades and later along the coast of Lake Worth in 1910. The men sold the land to buyers throughout the United States and Canada, offering 5 acres (2.0 ha) plots for $250, with a $10 down payment and a $10 per month charge, which also included a 25 by 25 ft (7.6 by 7.6 m) parcel on the shore of Lake Worth. However, difficulties involved with farming in the Everglades forced 308 buyers to settle at their properties along Lake Worth, an area that would later become the city of Lake Worth. Until the land boom of the 1920s, these lots were effectively abandoned. Around that time, Lawrence Carter "L. C." Swain of Massachusetts acquired 320 acres (130 ha) of land, with the intention of creating a community for the working class. He initially platted approximately half of the land in 1923, with a plat just west of Military Trail becoming the original section of the city. By 1925, Swain began selling lots for $225.

The town was originally incorporated as Greenacres City on May 24, 1926. The name Greenacres was the winning entry in a local naming contest. Upon incorporating, the town had an estimated 1,250 residents. Greenacres City was almost completely destroyed by the 1926 Miami hurricane and again by the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane. Swain died in 1944; Swain Boulevard and L. C. Swain Middle School are named in his honor. In 1945, about 125 residents petitioned for the Florida Legislature to abolish the Greenacres City as a municipality. The legislature passed a bill to dis-incorporate Greenacres City in April of that year, which became a law on April 24, 1945, without the signature of Governor Millard Caldwell. Then-Mayor Charles A. Grabowski actively fought the new law, as no referendum to forfeit the town's charter had been held. Additionally, Grabowski accused a resident of starting the dissolution movement out of spite after being denied a homestead exemption and claimed that many of the signatories did not actually own property in Greenacres City. Grabowski also asserted that the pleas of city officials and a large number of residents in favor of remaining a town were ignored.

Source: Wikipedia, Greenacres, Florida