Did a recent storm leave your home in need of repair? Our storm damage restoration services in Canal Point, FL can help you rebuild and recover.
Hear from Our Customers
SuperClean Restoration is ready to assist with storm damage restoration across Palm Beach County. Our team handles the cleanup after floods and storms, making sure your home is safe. Using the latest methods and tools, we thoroughly remove storm debris and help you recover. Depend on us to restore your home with care and accuracy.
Ready to get started?
Storm damage can be disruptive and leave your home vulnerable. Our services in Palm Beach County include everything from fixing storm damage quickly to helping your home recover. We use the latest tools to remove debris and get things back to normal as soon as possible. Contact SuperClean Restoration to restore your home the right way.
Archaeological evidence from Big Mound City, located roughly 10 mi (16 km) of Canal Point, suggests that the Calusa tribe inhabited the area between about 500 BCE and 1650 CE. In 1909, Canal Point became the first White settlement on the eastern shore of Lake Okeechobee. The Southern States Land and Timber Company began planting sugarcane in the area in 1917. Around that time, the West Palm Beach Canal was completed. The canal connected Lake Okeechobee at Canal Point to West Palm Beach, allowing farms to sell crops to West Palm Beach or elsewhere in the United States via the Florida East Coast Railway. Transportation of crops by motor vehicle from the area to other destinations began in 1924 with the completion of Conners Highway, which mostly followed the path of the West Palm Beach Canal.
Unlike other communities along the southeastern and eastern shores of Lake Okeechobee, Canal Point was relatively unscathed by the 1928 hurricane. The community was likely inundated with 1.5 to 2.5 ft (0.46 to 0.76 m) of water and one death occurred. However, the local economy suffered greatly and never recovered after construction of the Herbert Hoover Dike limited boat traffic in the 1930s. Residents saved the historic Canal Point School from demolition and hoped to convert it into an agricultural museum, but the building was destroyed by a fire in 2008. About three years earlier, Hurricane Wilma wrecked several other historic buildings in the community.
Learn more about Canal Point.Local Resources
Useful Links
Here are some water system-related links:
Need immediate help with restoration? Contact SuperClean Restoration Services now for prompt, professional, and reliable solutions. Call us 24/7 at 844-741-9915 or fill out our contact form to get started today!