Endurance Riding Horses for Sale near Hackensack, NJ

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Jack
Jack is a sweetheart. Used as a lesson pony and camp pony. He loves attenti..
Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey
Chestnut
Welsh Pony
Gelding
16
Atlantic Highlands, NJ
NJ
Contact
Thoroughbred Stallion
Beautiful dappled dark bay TB with a large blaze and two hind white socks...
Sparta, New Jersey
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Sparta, NJ
NJ
$6,500
Half Arabian Mare
Cody is a sweet mare worth her weight in gold for the trail. She is about ..
Dingmans Ferry, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Dingmans Ferry, PA
PA
$3,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
T. Bird's Memphis is a registered TWH with great bloodlines. Memphis is a ..
Rockaway, New Jersey
Blue Roan
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Rockaway, NJ
NJ
$3,500
1

About Hackensack, NJ

The first inhabitants of the area were the Lenni Lenape, an Algonquian people (later known as the Delaware Indians) who lived along the valley of what they called the Achinigeu-hach, or " Ackingsah-sack", meaning stony ground (today the Hackensack River). A representation of Chief Oratam of the Achkinhenhcky appears on the Hackensack municipal seal. The most common explanation is that the city was named for the Native American tribe, though other sources attribute it to a Native American word variously translated as meaning "hook mouth", "stream that unites with another on low ground", "on low ground" or "land of the big snake", while another version described as "more colorful than probable" attributes the name to an inn called the "Hock and Sack". Settlement by the Dutch West India Company in New Netherland on west banks of the North River (Hudson River) across from New Amsterdam (present-day lower Manhattan) began in the 1630s at Pavonia, eventually leading to the establishment of Bergen (at today's Bergen Square in Jersey City) in 1660. Oratam, sachem of the Lenni Lenape, deeded the land along mid- Hackensack River to the Dutch in 1665.