Reviews
Meet Your Local Raccoon Removal Team
At 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal, we’re not just a wildlife removal company-we’re part of the Cherry Hill community. With years of experience serving homes in Camden County, we’ve seen it all when it comes to raccoons, and we know exactly how to handle them. We take pride in using humane, respectful methods that keep both your home and the raccoons safe. Whether it’s one raccoon or a family of them, you can count on us to get the job done right every time.
Our Easy Raccoon Removal Process
Why Raccoon Control Matters
Raccoons might seem harmless at first, but they can cause all sorts of trouble-tearing up your home, contaminating food, and even spreading diseases. That’s why it’s so important to deal with raccoon problems as soon as they arise. At 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal, we specialize in quick, humane raccoon removal services that keep your home safe and your family healthy. If you’re dealing with raccoons
The area now known as Cherry Hill was originally settled by the Lenni-Lenape Native Americans before being displaced by the first settlers from England, namely Quaker followers of William Penn who arrived in the late 17th century. The first settlement was a small cluster of homes named Colestown, in the perimeters of what is now the Colestown Cemetery on the corner of Route 41 (King’s Highway) and Church Road. The municipality was founded on February 25, 1844, in Gloucester County as Delaware Township from half of the area of Waterford Township and became part of Camden County at its creation some two weeks later on March 13, 1844. Portions of the township were taken to form Stockton Township (February 23, 1859) and Merchantville (March 3, 1874). At its territorial peak, Delaware Township included all of modern-day Cherry Hill Township, as well as the neighborhood of North Camden and the municipalities of Merchantville and Pennsauken (including Petty’s Island in the Delaware River).
The township’s population grew rapidly after World War II and continued to increase until the 1980s. Today, the municipality’s population is stable, with new development generally occurring in pockets of custom luxury houses or through the rehabilitation and adaptive reuse of commercial and industrial areas.
Cherry Hill was a 19th-century farm on Kaighn Avenue (Route 38), owned by Abraham Browning. The farm property, named Cherry Hill because of the cherry trees growing on the property, later became the Cherry Hill Inn (now an AMC Theatres Cherry Hill 24 movie theater complex), as well as an RCA office campus (now a shopping center with big-box retailers and Target), and today’s Cherry Hill Towers and Cherry Hill Estates housing developments.
Learn more about Cherry Hill.