Delaware Local Plumber

Delaware Ontario Plumber Services

If you live in Delaware, Ontario, and are looking for help with your residential plumbing needs, look no further. London Plumbing operates in London (of course), but also in the general area surrounding the city, including Delaware.

If you’re dealing with: clogged drains and pipes, broken toilets, leaky pipes and fixtures, and damage from water softeners, or anything else plumbing related, we have solutions for you.

We also do installations of toilets and fixtures, dishwashers, water softeners, washers, water heaters, sump pumps, and more.

If you live in Delaware and you need help with your residential plumbing, don’t delay, contact London Plumbing.

We’re happy to help you get your home working ship shape again.

Delaware 24 Hour Plumbing Services

If you’re a resident of Delaware Ontario, and you need help with emergency plumbing help, we’ve got you covered.

Our experienced and licensed plumbers can help with emergency repairs and installations for kitchen, bathroom, sewer lines, hot water heaters, and much more.

Call us and we’ll be there right away to get your house running smoothly again.

Contact London Plumbing for all your Delaware plumbing needs.

24hr Emergency Plumbing in Delaware

General Plumbing Repairs in Delaware

New Plumbing Installations in Delaware

Plumbing services also available for: Mt. Brydges, Komoka, Kilworth, Muncey, Talbotville, St. Thomas, Aylmer, Thamesford, Ingersoll, Tillsonburg, Beachville, Thorndale, Nilestown, Harrietsville, Ilderton, Lobo, Poplar Hill, Strathroy, Ailsa Craig, Lucan, Arva

How To Get To Delaware

If you’re starting in London, the easiest way to get to Delaware is to head west along Southdale Road.

Keep going past Byron until Southdale ends at Westdel Bourne. Take a left there, and follow it until you reach Highway 2, also known as Longwoods Road.

Turn right, and follow the road. It will take you right to Delaware.

History of Delaware

Delaware Ontario got its start as a First Nations village. Part of the Attawandaron branch of Hurons, the area’s first recorded contact with Europeans was in 1793, when Upper Canada’s new lieutenant governor John Graves Simcoe embarked on a surveying trip along the Thames River to Detroit.

The first European to actually settle there, though, was a man named Ebenezer Allen. Known as “Indian” Allen because of his affinity for First Nations people, he also founded the city of Rochester, New York. Allen ended up in Delaware later in his life, building a grist mill and a distillery.

More European settlers began making their way to the area in the following years, as well as a large number of American settlers who were drawn by the promise of inexpensive land grants from Upper Canada’s lieutenant governor John Graves Simcoe.

Today, Delaware boasts a population of 2,521, covering a total area of just under 100km.

Things To Do In Delaware

Despite its size, Delaware has a number of attractions that draw Londoners and other southwestern Ontarians.

One of the most significant is Delaware Speedway, a half-mile paved racetrack that happens to be the oldest of its kind in Canada. It has been running since 1952.

Nearby, you’ll also find the Ska-Nah-Doht heritage site, a rebuilt First Nations village based on archaeological research.