Pointe à la Hache LA Public Insurance Adjusters
Our team is ready to help you get MAXIMUM PAYOUT from your insurance company. Make us your first call at 504-291-8008 for a free insurance claim consult.
We are helping Pointe à la Hache, LA homeowners, condo associations, property managers, and business owners with Hurricane Ida major flood, roof, and wind damage insurance claims in these areas:
Harlem
Bellevue
Perez Rd
Burnbridge
Highway 15
Ostrica
Olga
Linwood
Greenwood
Woodlawn
Wills Point
Other areas not listed — please call us at 800-654-3041.
Pointe a La Hache LA Condominium major flood damage insurance claim
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 a storm appears out of nowhere and a bad accident happens, someone needs to be in your corner fighting for YOU!
We specialize in business and condominium water damage, wind damage, structural damage, fire damage, mold, and asbestos damage insurance claims. Make us your first call!
About Global Patriot Adjusters
lead hurricane public insurance adjuster for louisiana, owner of global patriot adjusters
Global Patriot Adjusters is a company birthed and built on the single goal of fanatically bringing every dollar deserved to clients from an insurance claim. These accidents can be unforeseeable and sometimes unpreventable, the aftermath can sometimes be devastating.
We pride ourselves on maintaining the best reputation in the Public Adjuster business by taking every claim for every client as a project with personal ownership and accountability.
Pointe a La Hache Louisiana mold damage insurance claim
About Pointe à la Hache LA
Pointe à la Hache (/ˌpɔɪnt lə ˈhæʃ/ POYNT lə HASH) is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, United States. Located on the east bank of the Mississippi River, the village has been the seat for Plaquemines Parish since the formation of the parish. As of the 2010 census, its population was 187, less than half its 1930 population. It suffered severe damage from Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and Tropical Storm Lee in 2011.
The Pointe à la Hache Ferry, which connects to West Pointe a la Hache across the Mississippi, is the furthest downriver vehicle crossing point on the river.
History
Native American settlement in the area goes back thousands of years. The earliest European settlement in the area was by the French about 1700. The name "Pointe à la Hache" is French for "axe point, or cape". In the Mitchell Map of 1755, this is marked as "Hatchet Point"
Ruins remain of the early 18th-century French installation, Fort de La Boulaye, that was built by French colonists to defend their claim of territory against the Spanish and English interests. The land there is mostly marshland, with a strip of higher land less than a mile wide between the wetlands and the Mississippi River.
Plaquemines Parish was one of the original 19 divisions of the Territory of Orleans established in 1807 after the United States acquired the territory in the Louisiana Purchase. After Louisiana achieved U.S. statehood in 1812, it was one of the original state parishes. In the 1812 Louisiana hurricane, a storm surge from the Gulf pushed all the way into the River, and there was widespread death and destruction.
By 2014 this breach had been named Mardi Gras Pass by the US Coast Guard. In July 2014 LADOT requested that the US Board on Geographic Names formally name the pass. It is the first distributary to have developed in the river's delta in decades and is considered important for the natural rebuilding of the wetlands. Sundown Energy wanted to close the crevasse because it hampered the company's access to oil and gas wells, but alternatives are being negotiated.
After the 2010 Gulf of Mexico Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster, dead fish were found floating in the waterways even north of Pointe à la Hache
As of early 2012, only a small number of people have returned to live full-time in the parish seat. West Pointe à la Hache flooded again during Tropical Storm Isaac on August 28–29, 2012.
“Recently we worked on a Multi-tenant claim. We put the claim in writing and got allied proof. We forced the carrier to pay for building repairs, smoke damage, and a full re-roof of the building. The carrier had offered $28,000 on this claim. We settled the claim for $112,000.”
Global Patriot Adjusters LLC is a Louisiana licensed public insurance adjuster company (LA Lic# 573778).