Brown Horses for Sale near Chambersburg, PA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in East Waterford, PA 17021
Tennessee Walking Gelding
Otis is a 15.2hh 10-year-old Tennessee Walking gelding. Great disposition. ..
East Waterford, Pennsylvania
Brown
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
18
East Waterford, PA
PA
$4,000
Paint Stallion
Cherokee is a 10 year old, 16 hh, brown and white Paint gelding with beaut..
Westminster, Maryland
Brown
Paint
Stallion
-
Westminster, MD
MD
$3,000
Standardbred Stallion
Jitters is a gentle giant. Our 9 and 7 year old girls ride him with just a..
Biglerville, Pennsylvania
Brown
Standardbred
Stallion
-
Biglerville, PA
PA
$1,500
Dutch Warmblood Mare
By the International Open Jumper Ommen out of a CCI mare, Drink the Moon is..
Mount Airy, Maryland
Brown
Dutch Warmblood
Mare
-
Mount Airy, MD
MD
$15,000
Paint Mare
Beautiful breeding stock Paint mare. I had hoped she would be a Western Ple..
Mcconnellsburg, Pennsylvania
Brown
Paint
Mare
-
Mcconnellsburg, PA
PA
$2,500
Pony Mare
Sugar is an extremely affectionate child safe pony. Excellent for trail rid..
Mcconnellsburg, Pennsylvania
Brown
Pony
Mare
-
Mcconnellsburg, PA
PA
$400
Icelandic Stallion
Hrannar was born in Iceland and brought to the US in 1995 by Mill Farm. He..
Frederick, Maryland
Brown
Icelandic
Stallion
-
Frederick, MD
MD
$7,500
1

About Chambersburg, PA

Native Americans living or hunting in the area during the 18th century included the Iroquois, Lenape and Shawnee. The Lenape lived mostly to the east, with the Iroquois to the north and the Shawnee to the south. Traders, hunters and warriors traveled on the north-south route sometimes called the "Virginia path" through the Cumberland Valley, from New York through what became Carlisle and Shippensburg, then through what would become Hagerstown, Maryland, crossing the Potomac River into the Shenandoah Valley. Benjamin Chambers, a Scots-Irish immigrant, settled "Falling Spring" in 1730, building a grist mill and saw mill by a then-26-foot-high (7.9 m) waterfall where Falling Spring Creek joined Conococheague Creek. The creek provided power for the mills, and soon a settlement grew and became known as "Falling Spring." On March 30, 1734, Chambers received a "Blunston license" for 400 acres (160 ha), from a representative of the Penn family, but European settlement in the area remained of questionable legality until the treaty ending the French and Indian War, because not all Indian tribes with land claims had signed treaties.