Barrel Racing Horses for Sale near Chantilly, VA

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in New Market, MD 21774
Penny
UP FOR TRADE ONLY!! penny is a 14 y/o grade mare. she is a THICK and ..
New Market, Maryland
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Mare
16
New Market, MD
MD
Contact
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Fredericksburg, VA 22406
Rocks
Rocks is up for sale for no fault of his own,we bought him in June and have..
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Bay
Thoroughbred
Gelding
12
Fredericksburg, VA
VA
$2,800
Rose
Rose is a 5 year old 14.1 qh mare. She is high temperamented which means sh..
Frederick, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
11
Frederick, MD
MD
$250
Admiral
Admiral is a 15.2H nineteen-year-old ottb gelding who is currently running ..
Middletown, Virginia
Bay
Thoroughbred
Gelding
24
Middletown, VA
VA
$1,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Merlin is a Good Ol' Boy! Perfect on Trails, barrel races / gymkhana or we..
Columbia, Maryland
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Columbia, MD
MD
$2,000
Morab Stallion
Arab smart, Morgan versatile, make him your next sport horse! English, wes..
Boonsboro, Maryland
Sorrel
Morab
Stallion
-
Boonsboro, MD
MD
$2,500
Paint Mare
EXCELLENT BARREL HORSE! She is quick and fast. Owner going to have MAJOR ba..
Glen Burnie, Maryland
Paint
Mare
-
Glen Burnie, MD
MD
$2,000
Paint Stallion
Beautiful quarter horse conformation. Easy to catch, easy loader, cross ti..
King George, Virginia
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
King George, VA
VA
$4,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
handsome TB / QH horse with sweet disposition. Energetic, looks and acts y..
Centreville, Virginia
Sorrel
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Centreville, VA
VA
$1,800
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About Chantilly, VA

Chantilly was home to a number of colonial plantations in the 1700s, including the Sully Plantation (now the Sully Historic Site) built by Richard Bland Lee I. Other plantations included George Richard Lee Turberville's "Leeton Grove" (originally a 5,000+ acre plantation, the main house of which still stands at 4619 Walney Rd.), the John Hutchison Farm, and the Chantilly Plantation, after which Chantilly is named. Cornelia Lee Turberville Stuart, who was born at Leeton and was the daughter of George Richard Lee Turberville and Henrietta Lee, inherited a portion of Leeton in 1817 from her father. Stuart and her husband Charles Calvert Stuart, whom she had married in 1816, constructed the Chantilly Plantation and named it after the Westmoreland County plantation owned by her grandfather, Richard Henry Lee, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. During the Civil War, federal troops destroyed by fire the Chantilly Plantation manor house.