Lindsay, CA

Locksmith Lindsay, CA

24 Hour Services Throughout Lindsay, CA

Are you in need of a 24-hour locksmith in Lindsay, CA? Contact Regal Locksmith to dispatch a locksmith to you right away. A professional locksmith usually takes 30 minutes or less to arrive! The locksmiths come fully equipped with their van.

Residential Locksmith Services in Lindsay, CA

  • House Lockout Services
  • Residential Lock Replacements
  • Brand New Door Lock Installs
  • Smart Door Lock Replacement & Installations
  • Rekying Locks Services
  • Damaged Lock Repair
  • Broken Key Extractions
  • Stuck Key Extraction
  • House Safe Lockouts

24 Hour Lindsay Commercial Locksmith

  • Office Building Lockouts
  • Master Key System Re-Keying
  • New Lock Installation
  • Lock / Old Lock Repair
  • File Cabinet Unlocking

We also provide Auto Locksmith Services in Lindsay, CA

  • Car Lockout Services
  • Trunk lockouts
  • Car Unlock Service
  • Remote Key Services
  • Program / Re-Program or Replace Key Fobs
  • Vehicle Key Cutting
  • Car Key Replacement
  • Duplicate Car Keys
  • Transponder Key Programming
  • Broken Car Key Extraction
  • Broken Ignition Replacement or Repair
  • Broken Ignition switch Replacement or Repair

Lindsay, CA Roots

Lindsay is a city in Tulare County, California, United States. The population was 11,768 at the 2010 census. Lindsay is located southeast of Visalia and north of Porterville and is considered part of the Visalia-Porterville Metropolitan Area and the Porterville Urban Area by the United States Census Bureau.

The Yandanche tribe of Native Americans came to hunt and fish at the future site of Lindsay for centuries.[5] Future Military Governor of California John C. Fremont passed through twice by way of the Stockton – Los Angeles Road and the later Butterfield Overland Mail route on two of his four exploration trips. Julius Orton, a seventh generation descendant of Thomas, served as security for a pack train headed for Placerville, a booming California gold mining town, motivated by his futile search for gold. In 1859, with his wife and two small daughters, and driving a small herd of cattle, walked more than 200 miles (320 km) from the coast near Sacramento, to a homestead along the Tule River, southwest of Lindsay. In the 1880s, Julius Orton homesteaded another (160 acres (0.65 km2)) piece of land bordering on the property of pioneers Lewis and John Keeley, brothers who had taken on a homestead just a few miles southwest of Lindsay in the mid-1870s.[5]