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Vehicle Financing

With over thirty years experience in helping our customers find the right vehicle, we've been able to secure our position as financing experts in the auto industry. We pride ourselves on helping our customers through the maze of financial options available in respect to vehicle finance and leasing.

Benefits:

  • As a dealer we have access to all the banks and can shop the rates for you.
  • As a dealer we finance more money than most individuals and are eligible for preferred rates.
  • All of our loans are open.
  • Your new vehicle is the only collateral for any loan we arrange.
Get APPROVED today! Fill out the Secure credit application below and we will contact you with the details of your approval shortly. It’s that easy!

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Our highly qualified experts will demonstrate the cost of ownership for any of our vehicles and show you how to best economize on the dollars and cents. We will present options you want to see, and disregard the ones you don't! We won't "sell" you on a financial package, but we will give you the best options available to fill your needs and wants.

To the highest degree, our clientele is repeat business, so we want to ensure all the paperwork, options and financing is prepared, explained in a way that will exceed your expectations.

We look forward to working with you towards your next used vehicle from Gillespie Motors.

Grand River Bridge, Haldimand, OntarioHaldimand (2006 population 45,212) is a rural city-status single-tier municipality (but called a county) on the Niagara Peninsula in Southern Ontario, Canada, on the north shore of Lake Erie, and on the Grand River. Municipal offices are located in Cayuga. Contents

Haldimand's history has been closely associated with that of the neighbouring Norfolk County. Haldimand was first created as a county in 1800, from a portion of Norfolk. It was named after the governor of the Province of Quebec Sir Frederick Haldimand. In 1844 the land was surrendered by Six Nations to the Crown in an agreement that was signed by the vast majority of Chiefs in the Haldimand tract[citation needed]. The two counties were separate until 1974, when they were reunited as the Regional Municipality of Haldimand-Norfolk.

In 2001, the counties were separated again. Although they both retain the name "county" for historical reasons, each is governed as a single municipality, with no formal level of government below that of the county, and thus neither is a true county.

Beginning in February 2006, a land dispute by native protesters began near Caledonia over a housing development being built on the outskirts of town, which members of the nearby Mohawk Six Nations people claim is rightfully their land, see the Caledonia land dispute. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.