Barrel Racing Horses for Sale near Springfield, MA

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Paint Stallion
Super sweet boy, well socialised, NOTHING wrong with him, just need the sp..
Torrington, Connecticut
Liver Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Torrington, CT
CT
Contact
Paint Stallion
Absolutely perfectly built well socialised colt. Very pretty, smart and ha..
Torrington, Connecticut
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Torrington, CT
CT
$200
Quarter Horse Mare
Abbey has been there done that. Eng / West / Jumps / Shown / Barrelraced ..
Stafford Springs, Connecticut
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Stafford Springs, CT
CT
$750
Appendix Stallion
Shiloh is green broke. He has been backed about 10 times and was started us..
Storrs, Connecticut
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
-
Storrs, CT
CT
$1,300
Quarter Horse Stallion
chief is 13 yrs old and 15. 2 hands high. i bought him off a ranch in oklah..
Granby, Massachusetts
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Granby, MA
MA
$3,000
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About Springfield, MA

Springfield was founded in 1636 by English Puritan William Pynchon as "Agawam Plantation" under the administration of the Connecticut Colony. In 1641 it was renamed after Pynchon's hometown of Springfield, Essex, England, following incidents, including trade disputes as well as Captain John Mason's hostilities toward native tribes, which precipitated the settlement's joining the Massachusetts Bay Colony. During its early existence, Springfield flourished both as an agricultural settlement and as a trading post, although its prosperity waned dramatically during (and after) King Philip's War in 1675, when natives laid siege to it and burned it to the ground as part of the ongoing campaign. During that attack, three-quarters of the original settlement was burned to the ground, with many of Springfield's residents survived by taking refuge in John Pynchon's brick house, the "Old Fort", the first such house to be built in the Connecticut River Valley. Out of the siege, Miles Morgan and his sons were lauded as heroes; as one of the few homesteads to survive the attack, alerting troops in Hadley, as well as Toto, often referred to as the "Windsor Indian" who, running 20 miles from Windsor, Connecticut to the settlement, was able to give advance warning of the attack.