All-Around Horses for Sale near Binghamton, NY

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Paint - Horse for Sale in Big Flats, NY 14903
Paint Stallion
Being offered for on farm lease only. Lotta Pleasure aka Petey is a very sw..
Big Flats, New York
Tobiano
Paint
Stallion
17
Big Flats, NY
NY
$380
Wanted
Looking for a small horse- I would like a lesson horse for my grandchildren..
Sidney Center, New York
Bay
Quarter Pony
Gelding
21
Sidney Center, NY
NY
$2,000
Quarter Horse Mare
marley is a beautiful Quarter horse cross!!she has an awesome pedigree!!! ..
Towanda, Pennsylvania
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Towanda, PA
PA
$2,500
Appendix Mare
4 yr old daughter of versatility champion. Appendix breeding (3 / 4 QH) Whi..
Honesdale, Pennsylvania
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
Honesdale, PA
PA
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Awesome gorgeous chestnut colt with chrome - super calm disposition, smart,..
Friendsville, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Friendsville, PA
PA
$2,500
Bashkir Curly Stallion
"Strolling Seamus" is a 9 mo old TWH / Bashkir Curly X colt, cremello w / d..
Alpine, New York
Cremello
Bashkir Curly
Stallion
-
Alpine, NY
NY
$1,500
Trakehner Mare
Gorgeous and talented 4 year old Warmblood mare. She is a Trakehner / musta..
Dryden, New York
Bay
Trakehner
Mare
-
Dryden, NY
NY
$450,000
1

About Binghamton, NY

The first known people of European descent to come to the area were the troops of the Sullivan Expedition in 1779, during the American Revolutionary War, who destroyed local villages of the Onondaga and Oneida tribes. The city was named after William Bingham, a wealthy Philadelphian who bought the 10,000 acre patent for the land in 1786, then consisting of portions of the towns of Union and Chenango. Joshua Whitney, Jr., Bingham's land agent, chose land at the junction of the Chenango and Susquehanna Rivers to develop a settlement, then named Chenango Point, and helped build its roads and erect the first bridge. Significant agricultural growth led to the incorporation of the village of Binghamton in 1834. The Chenango Canal, completed in 1837, connected Binghamton to the Erie Canal, and was the impetus for the initial industrial development of the area.