Barrel Racing Horses for Sale near Lehighton, 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
Good looking paint. Great solid build. Barrel trained but would be great ..
Nazareth, Pennsylvania
Paint
Stallion
-
Nazareth, PA
PA
$4,500
Thoroughbred Mare
Middie is a fast mare that can turn on a dime. Built for speed and she use..
Columbia, New Jersey
Dun
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Columbia, NJ
NJ
$9,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Lad was broke in Western, and then trained in Dressage, but he does not lik..
Boyertown, Pennsylvania
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Boyertown, PA
PA
$3,000
Paint Stallion
Good tempered paint gelding, dark brown with white markings. Trails rides, ..
Bangor, Pennsylvania
Tobiano
Paint
Stallion
-
Bangor, PA
PA
$2,500
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About Lehighton, PA

At the time of the first European's encounters with historic American Indian tribes, this area was part of the shared hunting territory of the Iroquoian Susquehannock and the Algonquian Lenape (also called the Delaware, after their language and territory along the Delaware River) peoples, who were often at odds. Relatives of the peoples of New England and along the St. Lawrence valley of Canada, the Delaware bands occupied much of the coastal mid-Atlantic area in Delaware, New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania and lower eastern New York, including Long Island. The Susquehannock confederacy's homelands were mainly along the Susquehanna River, from the Mohawk Valley in lower New York southerly to the Chesapeake and Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, but may have ranged into the 'empty lands' of West Virginia, Eastern Ohio, and Western Pennsylvania. The Dutch and Swedes first settled the Delaware Valley, and found the area north of the Lehigh Gap to be lightly occupied, probably by transients, but traveled regularly by the Susquehannock.