Appendix Horses for Sale near Clarksburg, MD

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Appendix Mare
Frankie is dead quiet. She is going undersaddle and is a great mover with ..
Jarrettsville, Maryland
Bay
Appendix
Mare
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Jarrettsville, MD
MD
$20,000
Appendix Mare
Toots is very sweet. She would be great for a kid moving up from a pony. S..
Jarrettsville, Maryland
Bay
Appendix
Mare
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Jarrettsville, MD
MD
$15,000
Appendix Stallion
Mozart is a wonderful, quiet, EZ horse for anyone. Super lesson horse. Wil..
Elkridge, Maryland
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
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Elkridge, MD
MD
$2,900
Appendix Stallion
"Seymore" is by World Champion producer RR Slo Slippin Story o / o an 18h ..
New Market, Maryland
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
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New Market, MD
MD
$1,500
Appendix Stallion
Nick is a 6 year old 15'3 chestnut Appendix Quarter horse with white markin..
Myersville, Maryland
Chestnut
Appendix
Stallion
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Myersville, MD
MD
$10,000
Appendix Mare
LADY GODIVA - elegant, 10 yo liver chestnut mare. Exceptionally athletic...
Haymarket, Virginia
Appendix
Mare
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Haymarket, VA
VA
$6,500
Appendix Stallion
Veteran, 13 year old QH well known on circuit for performance as hunter. Wa..
Clarksville, Maryland
Gray
Appendix
Stallion
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Clarksville, MD
MD
$12,500
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About Clarksburg, MD

Clarksburg is named for trader John Clarke, and was established at the intersection of the main road between Georgetown and Frederick and an old Seneca trail. One of its earliest white inhabitants was a man named Michael Ashford Dowden, who in 1752 received a patent for 40 acres (160,000 m 2) from the colonial government called "Hammer Hill", and two years later permission to build an inn. The inn itself is a footnote in history, hosting the army of General Edward Braddock during the French and Indian War, serving as a meeting place for local Sons of Liberty in the years before the American Revolution, and possibly serving dinner to President Andrew Jackson on his way to his inauguration. Jamie, grandson of the trader, built a general store in the area around 1770, and over the next thirty years enough people moved to the area that Clark was appointed postmaster for the community. By 1875, Clarksburg was a major town in the northern part of the county, but the construction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad undermined its economy.