Black Horses for Sale near Holyoke, MA

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Miniature - Horse for Sale in Chatham, NY 12037
Hotstuff
Talented and spunky Mini experienced harness horse needs to go back to work..
Chatham, New York
Black
Miniature
Gelding
17
Chatham, NY
NY
$3,000
Hackney Mare
Owner must retire due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer, ..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Mare
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$1,500
Hackney Mare
Owner must retire due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. ..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Mare
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$1,500
Hackney Stallion
Owner retiring due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. Sh..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Stallion
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$2,500
Friesian Stallion
Colt out of Hertog Jan v. d. Paddensteeg a breathtaking 1 premium 2002 im..
Belchertown, Massachusetts
Black
Friesian
Stallion
-
Belchertown, MA
MA
$3,500
Paint Mare
Reg. Tobiano. Very well broke. Great for beginner or advanced rider. Very ..
Belchertown, Massachusetts
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Belchertown, MA
MA
$5,500
Paint Stallion
Playboy is an All Around Great Reg. APHA Black & White gelding. Will perf..
Chester, Massachusetts
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Chester, MA
MA
$6,000
Hackney Mare
Just N Image (AHHA #20742) (The Executive (Dun - Haven Crescendo) X Maxwelt..
Middletown, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Mare
-
Middletown, CT
CT
$4,000
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About Holyoke, MA

English colonists arrived in the Connecticut River Valley in 1633, when traders from the Plymouth Plantation established a post at Windsor, Connecticut. In 1636, Massachusetts Bay Colony assistant treasurer and Puritan iconoclast William Pynchon led a group of settlers from Roxbury, Massachusetts to the Valley to establish Springfield on land scouts had found to be advantageous for farming and trading. This settlement was built north of the Connecticut River's first major falls, Enfield Falls, where seagoing vessels had to transfer cargo into smaller shallops to continue northward on the river. Due to its proximity to the banks of the river Springfield quickly became a successful settlement on the Bay Path to Boston, as well as the Massachusetts Path to Albany. Originally, the settlement spanned both sides of the river but was partitioned in 1774 with the land on the western bank becoming West Springfield, Massachusetts.