English Pleasure Horses for Sale near Munroe Falls, OH

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Cleveland Bay - Horse for Sale in Holmesville, OH 44633
Gaylord Raleigh
Gaylord Raleigh,purebred Cleveland bay stallion sired by Foxhollow Navigato..
Holmesville, Ohio
Bay
Cleveland Bay
Stallion
8
Holmesville, OH
OH
$22,000
BA Ravenhurst
18 years old Black Registered Teeth floated 1st level dressage, excels at..
Madison, Ohio
Black
Arabian
Mare
22
Madison, OH
OH
$2,400
Hackney - Horse for Sale in Youngstown, OH 44505
Hackney Gelding
Rem is a fun little pony to work with. Can be ridden Western or English. St..
Youngstown, Ohio
Chestnut
Hackney
Gelding
14
Youngstown, OH
OH
$5,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Petersburg, OH 44454
Quarter Horse Mare
FOR SALE: 2006 AQHA Sorrel Western pleasure/ Horsemanship/ English mare. So..
Petersburg, Ohio
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
19
Petersburg, OH
OH
$7,000
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Chagrin Falls, OH 44022
Thoroughbred Gelding
Thoroughbred hunter jumper gelding, OTTB. UTD on everything, ferrier, denti..
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
Bay
Thoroughbred
Gelding
16
Chagrin Falls, OH
OH
$3,000
Penny
Excellent dressage prospect and loves to jump. She'd need an intermediate o..
Sugarcreek, Ohio
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Mare
17
Sugarcreek, OH
OH
$6,000
Combats First Kiss
Text 330-618-3536..
Polk,ohio, Ohio
Bay
Morgan
Mare
19
Polk,ohio, OH
OH
$5,000

About Munroe Falls, OH

Like much of the Connecticut Western Reserve, the area that makes up present-day Munroe Falls was previously inhabited by various tribes of American Indians. When the Western Reserve began being surveyed in 1796, what is now Munroe Falls was mostly in the southern part of the survey township Town 3, Range 10 (later to be Stow Township), then a part of Washington County before being placed in the new Jefferson County the following year. In 1800, it was made part of Trumbull County, which followed the boundaries of the Western Reserve, and in 1808, the area was made part of Portage County. The first settlers in present-day Munroe Falls, a group of around 40 people including Francis Kelsey and William Stow, came in 1809. Kelsey built a sawmill on the south side of the Cuyahoga River and a gristmill was built on the north side.