Raccoon Removal in Camden, NJ

Effective and Safe Solutions
Need raccoon removal in Camden? 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal provides reliable, humane wildlife removal services that protect your home and keep it raccoon-free. Call us today for expert assistance!

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100% Customer Satisfaction

Why Choose Our Services?

Top Benefits for Your Safety

  • Immediate response: We act quickly to remove raccoons from your property.
  • Humane methods: We prioritize safety for both you and the wildlife.
  • Property protection: Prevent costly damage and potential health risks.
  • Expert team: Our skilled professionals ensure peace of mind with every removal.
A metal wire animal trap sits on a stone patio in a garden setting. The trap has a closed door mechanism and a long handle on top for carrying. Inside, there is a piece of yellow fruit, possibly a bait, placed near the closed back side of the trap.

Local Exterminators in Camden County

About 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal

At 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal, located in Camden, NJ, we specialize in raccoon removal services. Our team of trained exterminators uses safe and humane techniques to ensure your home stays raccoon-free. We’re proud to serve Camden County, offering prompt, effective solutions that protect both your property and the local wildlife.

A raccoon with a distinctive black eye mask and grey fur leans over the edge of a green plastic bin, appearing to search inside. The background is blurred with brown foliage.

Our Process Explained

Streamlined Raccoon Removal

  • Inspection: We thoroughly assess your property to locate signs of raccoon activity.
  • Removal: Using safe, humane methods, we eliminate raccoons from your home.
  • Prevention: We install measures to block future raccoon infestations, ensuring long-term protection.
A raccoon is confined in a humane live trap placed on a blue tarp outdoors. The raccoon appears alert and curious, standing on a pile of dried leaves within the cage. The background shows a grassy area out of focus.
A raccoon is trapped in a metal cage placed on the ground amidst grass and dried leaves. The raccoon is partially concealed, with its body pressed against the cage and its face peeking out through the bars, appearing alert.

Importance of Raccoon Removal

Protecting Your Property

Raccoon removal is essential for safeguarding your property and health. These animals can cause significant structural damage and carry diseases like rabies. At 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal, we understand the urgency of humane raccoon extermination. Our team provides quick, efficient services throughout Camden, NJ, and Camden County. Call 609-350-3158 today to schedule your service and secure a raccoon-free home.


Ensure your home stays safe with 86 Pest and Wildlife Removal’s professional raccoon removal services in Camden, NJ. Call 609-350-3158 now for expert help!

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In 1626, Fort Nassau was established by the Dutch West India Company at the confluence of Big Timber Creek and the Delaware River. Throughout the 17th century, Europeans settled along the Delaware, competing to control the local fur trade. After the Restoration in 1660, the land around Camden was controlled by nobles serving under King Charles II, until it was sold off to a group of New Jersey Quakers in 1673. The area developed further when a ferry system was established along the east side of the Delaware River to facilitate trade between Fort Nassau and Philadelphia, the growing capital of the Quaker colony of Pennsylvania directly across the river. By the 1700s, Quakers and the Lenni Lenape Native Americans were coexisting. The Quakers’ expansion and use of natural resources, in addition to the introduction of alcohol and infectious disease, diminished the Lenape’s population in the area.

The 1688 order of the County Court of Gloucester that sanctioned ferries between New Jersey and Philadelphia was: “Therefore we permit and appoint that a common passage or ferry for man or beast be provided, fixed and settled in some convenient and proper place between ye mouths or entrance of Cooper’s Creek and Newton Creek, and that the government, managing and keeping of ye same be committed to ye said William Roydon and his assigns, who are hereby empowered and appointed to establish, fix and settle ye same within ye limits aforesaid, wherein all other persons are desired and requested to keep no other common or public passage or ferry.” The ferry system was located along Cooper Street and was turned over to Daniel Cooper in 1695. Its creation resulted in a series of small settlements along the river, largely established by three families: the Coopers, the Kaighns, and the Mickels, and these lands would eventually be combined to create the future city. Of these, the Cooper family had the greatest impact on the formation of Camden. In 1773, Jacob Cooper developed some of the land he had inherited through his family into a “townsite,” naming it Camden after Charles Pratt, the Earl of Camden.

For over 150 years, Camden served as a secondary economic and transportation hub for the Philadelphia area. However, that status began to change in the early 19th century. Camden was incorporated as a city on February 13, 1828, from portions of Newton Township, while the area was still part of Gloucester County. In 1832, Camden Township was created as a township coextensive with Camden City. The township existed until it was repealed in 1848.

Learn more about Camden.