North Palm Beach Rentals
A subdivision of North Palm Beach.
Gated : No
Club Membership : No
No-Fee Community : No
North Palm Beach Rentals, North Palm Beach, FL Homes for Rent
100 Water Club Court N | Water Club North Palm Bea
$22,000/mo
3 beds, 3/1 baths, 2,392sqft, $10/sqft
2 Water Club 601 Way #601 | Water Club North Palm Bea
$15,500/mo
3 beds, 4 baths, 2,445sqft, $7/sqft
100 Water Club Court N | Water Club North Palm Bea
$22,000/mo
3 beds, 3/1 baths, 2,392sqft, $10/sqft
2 Water Club 601 Way #601 | Water Club North Palm Bea
$15,500/mo
3 beds, 4 baths, 2,445sqft, $7/sqft
13587 Treasure Cove Circle #2 | Carriage Homes At Frenchm
$12,000/mo
3 beds, 2 baths, 2,474sqft, $5/sqft
122 Lakeshore Drive #8320 | Old Port Cove Condo Three
$2,700/mo
2 beds, 2/1 baths, 1,823sqft, $2/sqft
11370 Twelve Oaks Way #312 | Marina At Twelve Oaks Con
$2,900/mo
2 beds, 2 baths, 1,535sqft, $2/sqft
105 Paradise Harbour Boulevard #511 | Paradise Harbour Condo
$1,750/mo
2 beds, 2 baths, 1,079sqft, $2/sqft
About North Palm Beach Rentals
In 1954 for $5.5 million John D. MacArthur bought 2,600 acres (11 km2) of land in northern Palm Beach County that had been owned originally by Harry Seymour Kelsey and later by Sir Harry Oakes. The land included most of today’s North Palm Beach as well as Lake Park, Palm Beach Gardens and Palm Beach Shores. MacArthur then began developing what is now North Palm Beach, which sat on former mangrove swamps and farm land. The area was punctuated only by Monet Road and Johnson Dairy Road to the north and south and US 1 and Prosperity Farms Road to the east and west.
Full scale development and incorporation as a village occurred nearly simultaneously in 1956, with extensive dredging creating waterfront cul-de-sacs, and the development of a new east-west artery, Lighthouse Drive, connecting Old Dixie Highway and the newly aligned US 1. US 1 was widened and became the main office and civic corridor. Sir Harry Oakes’ castle-like home on US 1 became the clubhouse for the village golf course.
In 1958-1959, North Palm Beach elected Walter E. Thomas, Jr. as its first Mayor. Walter and his wife Jackie and four children (Ted, Larry, Jim, and Pam) were the 55th family to move into the Village, arriving in 1957.
Lake Park West Road was also extended from Old Dixie Highway to US-1 and was renamed Northlake Boulevard, becoming the village’s main commercial corridor. Twin City Mall, an enclosed shopping center, opened in 1970 at the corner of Northlake Boulevard and US-1 as Palm Beach County’s second enclosed shopping mall. This Mall built onto the previous grocery store/strip mall completed in 1959. The mall contained a Sears, Jeffersons and GC Murphy’s department stores, as well as the locally popular Karmelcorn and Orange Bowl eateries. The mall also sported one of the few movie theaters in the vicinity. The enclosed mall was demolished in the mid-1990s and has gradually been replaced by a mid-sized strip mall anchored by Publix. The village has maintained relative prosperity due to the many waterfront homes with Atlantic Ocean access as well as the overall jump in development in northern Palm Beach County in the last 10 years.
In 2006, village resident Jack Nicklaus redesigned the town’s golf course and it reopened in late 2006 to rave reviews. Nicklaus charged the Village of North Palm Beach $1 for his services.