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  • 1111 Roberts Ave, Feasterville, PA 19053
  • advocatepublicadjustment@gmail.com
  • (215) 364-4546

New Hope Public Adjuster

5 – 20 % Contingency Fees

SAVE MONEY CALL NOW!!!

(215) 364-4546

No Settlement | No Fee | No Obligations

New Hope Public Adjuster Serving Pennsylvania
Residents & Businesses Since 1992

New Hope Public Adjuster is Advocate Public Adjustment.

Our contingency fees are very competitive. Starting as low as 5% – 20 % that larger public adjusting firms find it hard to compete against.

We maximize your home claim settlement while saving you money. In addition, we offer great home claims service, return phone calls, and are only a phone call away.

We are your New Hope Public Adjuster, and at Advocate Public Adjustment our mission is to make sure the insurance company pays you enough money to rebuild any and all property damage sustained to your home or business while providing the highest level of professional public adjustment services.

Our claims staff will work to protect home owners and business owners manage their claims, and fully document their losses in order to maximize their financial interest in all insurance claim settlement returns.

Our goal is to reduce the emotional and financial burden placed upon you per the insurance policy contract as the result of a direct physical loss.

We know the insurance claim process!

New Hope Public Adjuster Insurance Claim Settlement Services

New Hope Public Adjuster Advocate Public Adjustment, LLC is dedicated to addressing all of your property damage home and business insurance claim needs as your public adjuster. Each property loss or insurance claim is unique and your New Hope Public Adjuster Advocate Public Adjustment, will work diligently to determine the extent and amount of your loss.

Below is a listing and description of the varied services that we offer.

Free Policy Review…no obligation

Let us review your insurance policy for FREE. Many times, individuals or business owners do not carry appropriate insurance coverage. Advocate Public Adjustment IS your New Hope Public Adjuster and we want to inform you about your specific policy making sure you understand if you not properly insured to value before it is too late. FINDING OUT AFTER A LOSS OCCURS IS TOO LATE.

Advocate Public Adjustment your New Hope Public Adjuster who takes control of the entire Home Claims Management process.

Advocate Public Adjustment, LLC takes charge quickly and ensures that you are protected during your time of need. Our experienced, professional advocate public adjuster home claims staff will manage every aspect of the property damage insurance claim. 

Advocate Public Adjustment, will be available anytime, to give you the peace of mind that you deserve. There is no claim too large or too small. We have negotiated thousands of claims for Pennsylvania residents and business owners since 1992.

Whether it’s home fire damage, home smoke damage, home water damage, home lightning strike, home wind damage or any other natural catastrophic disaster, such as hurricane damage, flood damage, tornado damage, or severe winter storms, we have the knowledge and insurance claim negotiation skills with experience to rebuild your property.

Advocate Public Adjustment the New Hope Public Adjuster, will immediately protect your property from further damage and provide emergency services in order to begin the restoration process. We will arrange for temporary housing solutions and secure emergency living funds to replace clothing, and or any other need that has developed from your loss. We are your New Hope Public Adjuster Advocate Public Adjuster, LLC.

New Hope Public Adjuster Insurance Claim Settlement Process

Advocate Public Adjustment will review the final settlement options with you for your home, business and or personal property.

We will make sure that you receive everything you need to maximum your insurance claim settlement as your New Hope Public Adjuster. We will prepare settlement documents for payment including business interruption, extra expense and business income claims (if applicable).

There are absolutely NO fees paid to Advocate Public Adjustment for our services by you, the insured. No out-of-pocket cost for our intervention protecting your assets as we handle every detail for a FANTASTIC Contingency Fee starting as low as 5% – 20% Maximum. (Depends on the circumstances) as to what kind of claim we are talking about.

New Hope, Pennsylvania

Coordinates40°21′51″N 74°57′5″W

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

New Hope, Pennsylvania

Borough

New Hope station in October 2010

Seal

Location of New Hope in Bucks County, Pennsylvania (left) and of Bucks County in Pennsylvania (right)

New Hope Location in Pennsylvania Show map of Pennsylvania Show map of the United States Show all

Coordinates: 40°21′51″N 74°57′5″W

Country

United States

State

Pennsylvania

County

Bucks

Government

 • Mayor

Laurence D. Keller

Area

[1]

 • Total

1.42 sq mi (3.67 km2)

 • Land

1.27 sq mi (3.29 km2)

 • Water

0.15 sq mi (0.38 km2)

Elevation

69 ft (21 m)

Population

 (2020)[2]

 • Total

2,612

 • Density

2,056.69/sq mi (794.08/km2)

Time zone

UTC−05:00 (Eastern (EST))

 • Summer (DST)

UTC−04:00 (EDT)

ZIP Code

18938

Area codes

215, 267, and 445

FIPS code

42-53712

GNIS feature ID

1182332[3]

Website

www.newhopeborough.org

New Hope is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 2,612 at the 2020 census. New Hope is located approximately 30 mi (48 km) north of Philadelphia, and lies on the west bank of the Delaware River at its confluence with Aquetong Creek. New Hope and neighboring Solebury and Upper Makefield townships are part of the Philadelphia metropolitan area. The two-lane New Hope–Lambertville Bridge carries automobile and foot traffic across the Delaware to Lambertville, New Jersey, on the east bank. New Hope’s primary industry is tourism.

Historic former residents include Founding Father Aaron Burr and author James A. Michener.

History

18th century

Lehigh Canal, Sunset, New Hope, PA, a 1918 portrait by Joseph PickettNew Hope station in 1945

Main Street in New Hope

New Hope is located along the route of the Old York Road, the former main highway between Philadelphia and New York City. It was generally regarded as the halfway point, where travelers would stay overnight and be ferried across the Delaware River the next morning. The section of U.S. Route 202 that passes just north of New Hope is still named York Road, and the original route is now Bridge Street (PA 179).

New Hope was first called “Coryell’s Ferry,” after the owner of the ferry business. The current name came into use following a fire in 1790 that destroyed several mills in the area; their reconstruction was considered a “new hope.”

The night prior to George Washington’s crossing of the Delaware River, Washington lodged in New Hope, and then destroyed the ferry so the British Army could not follow him. Following the Battle of Trenton and Battle of Princeton, when British troops were sweeping the area, seeking Continental Army troops, there was no response when they rang for the ferry. The British assumed the town was sympathetic to the Continental Army and shelled the town. Several of the older structures in the town still claim to have unexploded British ordnance lodged in their roofbeams.

19th century

The North Pennsylvania Railroad finished construction of their New Hope Branch in 1891, later being taken over by the Reading Railroad. Passenger service to Philadelphia’s Reading Terminal as well as all other passenger activity was terminated in 1952 from Hatboro, also the end for electrified track, and New Hope.

20th century

Between 1952 and 1966, only freight trains were seen entering and leaving New Hope, mostly to deliver paper pulp for the Union Camp Paper Corp. and to deliver sand and gravel to James D. Morrissey Materials Co., a cement company and a division of James D. Morrissey, Inc. In 1966, the New Hope and Ivyland Railroad was formed and bought 16 mi (26 km) of track from New Hope southwest to Ivyland. Scenic tourist excursions started the same year. Freight service to New Hope was then handled by the New Hope and Ivyland Railroad. In 1972, SEPTA, who by then took over Reading Railroad’s passenger operations, extended the electrified route to Warminster, where the current interchange for both SEPTA and NHRR is. Freight service to James D. Morrissey Materials Co. ceased sometime in the late 1970s and to Union Camp Paper Corp. in 1985. The New Hope and Ivyland Railroad continues to provide scenic tourist excursion passenger trains between New Hope and nearby Lahaska.

In 1983, NBC network anchorwoman Jessica Savitch and her boyfriend drowned after their car overturned into the Delaware Canal. The canal passes by Odette’s Restaurant, where the couple had dined on a rainy evening when visibility was poor and two warning signs were missed.[4]

21st century

In 2004 and 2006, New Hope was flooded when the Delaware River overflowed. On both occasions, the downtown businesses reopened within several days. Compared to the Great Flood of 1955, the 2004 and 2006 floods did not cause severe damage or fatalities.

Geography

New Hope as seen from Goat Hill Overlook in Lambertville, New Jersey

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the borough has a total area of 1.4 square miles (3.6 km2), of which 1.3 square miles (3.4 km2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km2) (11.19%) is water. Much of that water is the Delaware River.

The borough is located at the confluence of the Delaware River and Aquetong (Ingham) Creek, which begins its two-mile course in neighboring Solebury Township at Ingham Springs, the most productive spring in Southeastern Pennsylvania. The name Aquetong comes from a Lenape word meaning “spring in the bushes,”[5] while Ingham refers to Samuel D. Ingham, an industrialist, congressman, and advocate of the canal that would run through the town. Near its end in New Hope, the creek forms a scenic millpond and waterfall near the Bucks County Playhouse, a former mill.

The former place names Hood and Hufnagel are now part of the borough.[6]

Climate

According to the Köppen climate classification system, New Hope has a hot-summer, humid continental climate (Dfa). Dfa climates are characterized by at least one month having an average mean temperature ≤ 32.0 °F (0.0 °C), at least four months with an average mean temperature ≥ 50.0 °F (10.0 °C), at least one month with an average mean temperature ≥ 71.6 °F (22.0 °C) and no significant precipitation difference between seasons. Although most summer days are slightly humid in New Hope, episodes of heat and high humidity can occur with heat index values > 107 °F (42 °C). Since 1981, the highest air temperature was 103.3 °F (39.6 °C) on July 22, 2011, and the highest daily average mean dew point was 74.8 °F (23.8 °C) on August 13, 2016. The average wettest month is July which corresponds with the annual peak in thunderstorm activity. Since 1981, the wettest calendar day was 7.46 inches (189 mm) on August 27, 2011. During the winter months, the average annual extreme minimum air temperature is −0.3 °F (−17.9 °C).[7] Since 1981, the coldest air temperature was −12.1 °F (−24.5 °C) on January 22, 1984. Episodes of extreme cold and wind can occur, featuring wind chill values below −11 °F (−24 °C). The average annual snowfall (Nov-Apr) is between 24 inches (61 cm) and 30 inches (76 cm). Ice storms and large snowstorms depositing ≥ 12 inches (30 cm) of snow occur once every few years, particularly during nor’easters from December through February.

New Hope Public Adjuster, Public Adjuster Hope, Public Adjuster 18938

Advocate Public Adjustment is Your New Hope Public Adjuster

Call Now

(215) 364-4546