Barrel Racing Horses for Sale near Harrison, NY

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Greenwich, CT 06831
Dashing Babbler
Foal yet to be registered. Papers of parents in photos Both mare and stall..
Greenwich, Connecticut
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
2
Greenwich, CT
CT
$6,000
Other - Horse for Sale in Huntington, NY 11746
Other Gelding
10 year old warmblood cross gelding available for sale or lease. If you're ..
Huntington, New York
Red Roan
Other
Gelding
17
Huntington, NY
NY
Contact
Paint - Horse for Sale in Medford, NY 11763
Paint Gelding
Registered 15 yr old gelding,color me smart,needs very expierenced rider,gr..
Medford, New York
Bay
Paint
Gelding
23
Medford, NY
NY
$3,200
Safe Horse
I'm looking for a nice broken safe horse, we Dont mind if its a mare of gel..
Clifton, New Jersey
Pinto
Paint
Mare
17
Clifton, NJ
NJ
$4,000
Laurie Simone
Sweet, sane and sound Mare. Great temperment, no vices. Bathes, loads grea..
West Haven, Connecticut
Brown
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
16
West Haven, CT
CT
$1,850
Jack
Jack is a sweetheart. Used as a lesson pony and camp pony. He loves attenti..
Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey
Chestnut
Welsh Pony
Gelding
16
Atlantic Highlands, NJ
NJ
Contact
Thoroughbred Stallion
"Springs" is a very flashly looking guy with a great personality, that has ..
Moriches, New York
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Moriches, NY
NY
$3,500
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About Harrison, NY

Harrison was established in 1696 by a patent granted by the British government to John Harrison and three others, who had a year earlier bargained with local Native Americans to purchase an area of land above Westchester Path (an old trail that led from Manhattan to Port Chester) and below Rye Lake. Local custom holds that Harrison was given 24 hours to ride his horse around the area he could claim, and the horse couldn't swim or didn't want to get its feet wet, but this is folklore. In fact, the land below Westchester Path and along Long Island Sound had already been purchased and partly developed by the settlers of Rye, NY. The area that became Harrison had also been sold in 1661 or 1662, and again in 1666, to Peter Disbrow, John Budd, and other investors or early residents of Rye. Disbrow and Budd evidently lost their paperwork and the land was ultimately granted to Harrison and his co-investors in 1696.