Fanshawe Pioneer Village


Fanshawe Pioneer Village — London

📍 1424 Clarke Road, London, Ontario
🏛 Living-history village preserving rural life in Southwestern Ontario
🌾 Historic buildings, farm demonstrations, pioneer heritage

Plan Your Visit

📍 Location: London, Ontario (Fanshawe Conservation Area)
🕒 Season: Open seasonally with heritage events and programs
🏛 Experience: Historic buildings, farm demonstrations, costumed interpreters
🚗 Parking: On-site parking available
🌐 Official Website: Fanshawe Pioneer Village


Step Into Southwestern Ontario’s Pioneer Past

Located within Fanshawe Conservation Area in London, Fanshawe Pioneer Village recreates the atmosphere of rural communities in Southwestern Ontario during the 19th century.

Visitors can explore a collection of historic homes, barns, and village buildings that illustrate how early settlers built farms and communities across the region. Demonstrations and exhibits help bring the agricultural traditions of the era to life, showing how farming families worked the land and supported growing settlements.

Through preserved structures and living-history programs, the village offers visitors a meaningful opportunity to experience the rural heritage that helped shape Southwestern Ontario.

Did You Know?

Fanshawe Pioneer Village features more than 30 historic buildings, many relocated from communities across Middlesex County to help preserve the region’s early rural history.

Fanshawe Pioneer Village

The Heritage Attraction at a Glance & the Story Behind the Site

Fanshawe Pioneer Village is a living history museum located within the scenic Fanshawe Conservation Area in London, Ontario, preserving and interpreting the rural history of Middlesex County between 1820 and 1920. It was established in 1959 as a community effort to conserve historic buildings and pioneer heritage in southwestern Ontario, and today features over 30 restored and replica heritage structures spread across more than 46 acres of fields, gardens, and woodlands.

Two women walking through the village

Visitors explore this open-air village to discover homes, barns, blacksmith shops, churches, schools, general stores, and more all furnished and interpreted to illustrate daily life in rural communities during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Costumed interpreters, volunteer guides, and interactive exhibits bring the past to life with demonstrations of historical crafts, trades, and seasonal activities.

Horse draw wagon going past building - Fanshawe Pioneer Village

Fanshawe Pioneer Village’s collection of material culture, including furniture, domestic tools, vehicles, and agricultural equipment, was gathered through community donations and reflects the agricultural and social history of the region. The site also hosts seasonal special events and exhibits that expand the narrative of this rural landscape, evolving how visitors understand the connection between settlement, labour, and community development.

William H. Weir Building

Interpretation at Fanshawe Pioneer Village acknowledges that the land has a longer Indigenous history, and recent interpretive efforts incorporate broader historical perspectives in collaboration with community voices.

Horse drawn wagon carrying village visitors.

Agriculture at the Heart of the Story

Agriculture is a central element of Fanshawe Pioneer Village’s story. Many of the buildings represent homesteads and farmsteads from the 19th century, complete with barns, tool sheds, crop fields, orchards, and heritage gardens. The Caverhill Farmstead, for example, depicts a mixed-farming operation where crops, fruit trees, and livestock were integral to food production and family livelihood.

Two women walking on village path with white church in the background

Visitors can see heritage breeds of animals such as sheep, pigs, and waterfowl that reflect the agricultural practices of earlier generations. The village’s heritage gardens, including a kitchen garden that grows crops like the “Three Sisters”, demonstrate farming and food production techniques shared between Indigenous peoples and settlers, underscoring the intertwined history of land use and cultural knowledge.

Fanshawe Pioneer Village merchant asking people to come into his store

Demonstrations by interpreters often include activities like butter churning, animal care, and crop cultivation tasks, helping guests connect with the labour and skills that sustained rural communities. These experiences highlight how agriculture shaped daily routines, seasonal work, and community identities in Middlesex County and beyond.

Beautiful yellow home with people sitting on the veranda

Rooted in the Local Community

Fanshawe Pioneer Village is tightly woven into the cultural and community fabric of London and the surrounding area. Operated by the non-profit London & Middlesex Heritage Museum with support from local partners, the village serves as both an educational resource and a hub for community engagement.

Pioneer garden with log building in the background - Fanshawe Pioneer Village

The site hosts a range of special events and seasonal programming, from heritage demonstrations and living history weekends to gallery exhibits and holiday celebrations. These draw families, school groups, and visitors from across Ontario, fostering a sense of shared history and regional pride.

Old mill with water wheel on the front of the building

Fanshawe Pioneer Village also makes strides toward inclusive interpretation and storytelling, incorporating exhibits and community collaborations that reflect the diverse histories connected to the land. By bringing together heritage preservation, agricultural interpretation, and communal experiences, the village continues to celebrate the land, labour, and lives that shaped Middlesex County over more than a century.