Heavy Towing Cherbourg

Clayton's Towing provides Heavy Towing in Cherbourg
along with quality, safe & reliable towing solutions

Offering Cherbourg Towing Services, 24 Hours A Day, 7 Days A Week. Clayton's Towing provides Towing Services Queensland Wide. Our 24/7 Tow Truck Services in and around these areas include:

Location : Cherbourg

Towing Sunshine Coast

24/7 Heavy Towing Across Queensland

With depots in Beerwah, Caboolture, Childers, Kilcoy, Gympie, Mackay, Maleny, Maroochydore, Maryborough, Nambour, Nanango, Noosaville & Rockhampton, we service throughout Cherbourg and across South-East Queensland.

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We Care About Our Service

At Clayton's we ensure the best for our customers with fully insured services, Industry Leading Equipment & Highly Qualified Staff to assist.
Offering Premium Services in Cherbourg at reasonable prices.
5/5
*Working with all major insurance providers throughout Australia

24 Hours, 7 Days A Week

With 24 Hour Towing Services, Our Dispatch Team is always available around the clock to take your call.

Fast Response Heavy Towing

Queensland's Most Comprehensive Fleet In Vehicle Towing & Recovery Services. With 12 depots across South-East Queensland.

50 Years Of Experience

Established on the Sunshine Coast. Now servicing Queensland with Professional, Reliable & Experienced Towing Solutions.

Clayton’s Towing Latest News! Keep up to date with the latest on our Vehicle AuctionsCareer Opportunities or upcoming events.

Cherbourg (French pronunciation: [ʃɛʁbuʁ] (listen); Norman: Chèrbourg, Tchidbouo) is a former commune and subprefecture located at the northern end of the Cotentin peninsula in the northwestern French department of Manche. It was merged into the commune of Cherbourg-Octeville on 28 February 2000, which was merged into the new commune of Cherbourg-en-Cotentin on 1 January 2016.

Cherbourg is protected by Cherbourg Harbour, between La Hague and Val de Saire, and the city has been a strategic position over the centuries, disputed between the English and French. Cited as one of the "keys to the kingdom" by Vauban, it became, by colossal maritime development work, a first-rate military port under the leadership of Napoleon I, and holds an arsenal of the French Navy. A stopping point for prestigious transatlantic liners in the first half of the 20th century, Cherbourg was the primary goal of US troops during the invasion of Normandy in 1944.

Along with its use as a military, fishing and yachting port, it is also a cross-Channel ferry port, with routes to the English ports of Poole and Portsmouth, the Irish ports of Rosslare Harbour and Dublin, and St Helier on Jersey. Limited by its geographical isolation from being a great commercial port, it is nonetheless an important shipbuilding centre, and a working-class city with a rural hinterland.