Barrel Racing Horses for Sale near Danville, PA

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Appaloosa - Horse for Sale in Kempton, PA 19529
Appaloosa Mare
Natalie is a 15yr. old, 15hh, Appaloosa-Thoroughbred mare. She is quiet and..
Kempton, Pennsylvania
Bay
Appaloosa
Mare
25
Kempton, PA
PA
$150
Quarter Horse Mare
AQHA #4149716 Timers Promise Class aka "Diamond" foaled April 28, 2001 sup..
Bernville, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Bernville, PA
PA
$2,500
Paint Stallion
Raffle is his barn name. His sire Paint me Hobby is a champion sire. He lo..
Millersburg, Pennsylvania
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Millersburg, PA
PA
$4,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Cat is a FANTASTIC horse that knows her job! This mare is FAST FAST FAST an..
Millersburg, Pennsylvania
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Millersburg, PA
PA
$8,500
Paint Mare
she is a ranch horse, cow horse, barrel racing horse, bombproof, kidsafe, t..
Trevorton, Pennsylvania
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Trevorton, PA
PA
$1,200
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About Danville, PA

As Europeans explored the coastal regions reachable from ships at the dawn of the 17th Century, the whole valley of the Susquehanna from South-central New York state to the upper Chesapeake Bay was owned by the fierce Iroquois-like Susquehannock people, like the Erie people, an Iroquoian speaking tribe with a similar related culture. As the European wars of religion lulled before the cataclysm of the Thirty Years' War, ca. 1600 AD the protestant Dutch traders first entered the Delaware Valley and began regularly trading firearms for furs, especially highly valued Beaver Pelts with the inland Susquehannock people in the vicinity of greater Philadelphia. Although the Susquehannocks lived well inland their hunting range owned the rich Beaver territory of the entire Susquehanna River drainage basin, since the Susquehannock's range also included hunting the Schuylkill and Lehigh Rivers and their tributaries (which they historically disputed by occasional mutual raiding with the Algonquian Delaware people dwelling along the Atlantic coastal strip extending west from Delaware and southern New Jersey into the Poconos), the Susquehanna had a wealth of coveted Beaver pelts, and so became formidably well armed. About the time New Sweden (1638) was founded, the Iroquois Confederacy began a series of escalating wars setting Indian versus Indian called the Beaver Wars—that ultimately would open up the frontier to white settlers—deadly long running territorial wars between Amerindian peoples for fur hunting and trapping territories.