Horses for Sale in Ridgely MD, Parsonsburg MD

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Quarter Horse Mare
Shown in local Snaffle Bit Futurities as a 2 and 3 year old and placed in t..
Ridgely, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$9,500
Thoroughbred Mare
Sammy is a quiet mare that is an excellent pleasure horse. She jumps 2'9-3'..
Parsonsburg, Maryland
Gray
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Parsonsburg, MD
MD
Contact
Paint Stallion
7 yr. old paint gelding, sorrel overo. Stands 16. 1 hands. Muscular, big c..
Bridgeville, Delaware
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Bridgeville, DE
DE
Contact
Arabian Mare
Bonita is a very pretty gray mare. Bask breeding on top and Morafic breed o..
Marydel, Maryland
Gray
Arabian
Mare
-
Marydel, MD
MD
$2,500
Appaloosa Stallion
Nice stud colt clips, ties, and trailers. Looks like a leopard. Mother is 1..
Marydel, Maryland
Gray
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Marydel, MD
MD
$3,000
Paint Mare
Beautiful paint mare, expecting her first foal at the end of March '03. Has..
Salisbury, Maryland
Paint
Mare
-
Salisbury, MD
MD
$2,800
Paint Stallion
A Touch Of Tradition has 161 halter points with APHA. His foals have the lo..
Berlin, Maryland
Overo
Paint
Stallion
-
Berlin, MD
MD
$750
Paint Stallion
Black overo, with white star and white socks with black spots, very quiet, ..
Felton, Delaware
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Felton, DE
DE
$1,350
Paint Stallion
Quiet, loud colored tovero, quick learner, loads, clips, trims, started gro..
Felton, Delaware
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Felton, DE
DE
$1,850
4

About Lewes, DE

Lewes was the site of the first European settlement in Delaware, a whaling and trading post that Dutch settlers founded on June 3, 1631 and named Zwaanendael (Swan Valley). The colony had a short existence, as a local tribe of Lenape Native Americans wiped out the 32 settlers in 1632. The area remained rather neglected by the Dutch until, under the threat of annexation from the English colony of Maryland, the city of Amsterdam made a grant of land at the Hoernkills (the area around Cape Henlopen, near the current town of Lewes) to a group of Mennonites for settlement in 1662. A total of 35 men were to be included in the settlement, led by a Pieter Cornelisz Plockhoy of Zierikzee and funded by a sizable loan from the city to get them established. The settlement was established in 1663, but the timing of the settlement was terrible: In 1664, the English wrested New Netherland from the Dutch, and they had the settlement destroyed with British reports indicating that “not even a nail” was left there.