5 Star Tree: Your local company in successful tree removal. Serving Palmetto, FL, we make landscapes amazing.
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Meet the Tree Removal Professionals
At 5 Star Tree, we’re providing high-quality tree services in Palmetto, FL. From residential to commercial projects, our experienced team handles everything with precision. Located in Manatee County, we use industry approved equipment and proven tactics for tasks like stump grinding, land clearing, and more. Trust 5 Star Tree for tree care that prioritizes your customer satisfaction at all levels.
Our Approach to Tree Removal
Tree Removal in FL
With tree removal at stake, we don’t recommend taking it in your own hands as that imposes risk of injury to you and further damage. 5 Star Tree provides tree removal services throughout Palmetto and Manatee County. Our team is equipped to handle any tree removal project, big or small. From towering pines to stubborn stumps, we have the tools and expertise to do things correctly. Give 5 Star Tree a call at 941-685-0403 to schedule your free landscape consultation!
A post office called Palmetto has been in operation since 1868. Samuel Sparks Lamb is considered the “Father of Palmetto,” having surveyed and plotted the city at its outset and donated several plots of land. He owned a general merchandise store in town. Samuel Sparks Lamb was from Clarke County, Mississippi and would arrive in the area near the Manatee River in 1868 establishing Palmetto. The city received its name from the palmetto trees near the original town site. Palmetto would first be incorporated in May 1893 as a village with its first mayor being P.S. Harlee. Palmetto would be reincorporated as a city in 1897 and in the following years grew. In 1902 with the arrival of the railroad, the center of town moved from the waterfront to the Seaboard Air Line train station, served by Sarasota Branch from Turkey Creek near Plant City through Palmetto to ‘Bradentown’ and Sarasota. By 1921, the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad would be operating a Tampa Southern Railroad Branch from Tampa to Palmetto and ‘Bradentown’.
Compiled during the late 1930s and first published in 1939, the Federal Writers’ Project’s Florida guide listed Palmetto’s population as 3,043 and described it as:
on the north bank of the Manatee River, has low frame-and-brick business buildings and numerous clapboard houses. The riverfront is alive with fishing and pleasure craft. Much of the town’s income is derived from the packing and shipping of fruits and vegetables.
Learn more about Palmetto.