Halter Horses for Sale near Rome, NY

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Paint Mare
Lakota Belle has excellent conformation and is a beautiful mover. She's a ..
Hartwick, New York
Chestnut
Paint
Mare
-
Hartwick, NY
NY
$28,000
Paint Stallion
One Tuff Lakota has got all the ground work finished and is now ready to g..
Hartwick, New York
Tobiano
Paint
Stallion
-
Hartwick, NY
NY
$1,800
Half Arabian Mare
PRICED TO SELL!!! MUST MOVE THIS FILLY! Luna is an absolutely gorgeous Ang..
Rome, New York
Gray
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Rome, NY
NY
$7,500
Quarter Horse Mare
This is filly is foundation bred top and bottom she has the lines of PEPPY..
Parish, New York
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Parish, NY
NY
$1,000
Pinto Mare
"Jazzy" is a gorgeous sorrel registered PtHA breeding stock mare with soli..
Norwich, New York
Sorrel
Pinto
Mare
-
Norwich, NY
NY
$5,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
show quality, WC bred colt, conformation, temperament, pedigree (COOLEST X..
Baldwinsville, New York
Red Dun
Quarter Horse
Stallion
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Baldwinsville, NY
NY
$1,800
Pinto Stallion
Gorgeous colt, easy to work with, good on halter, stud prospect, (if gelde..
Cazenovia, New York
Black Overo
Pinto
Stallion
-
Cazenovia, NY
NY
$900
Miniature Stallion
Handsome is a 4 year old gelding with an outstanding color and tail that dr..
Sauquoit, New York
Miniature
Stallion
-
Sauquoit, NY
NY
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About Rome, NY

Rome was founded along an ancient Native American portage path known as the Oneida Carrying Place , Deo-Wain-Sta, or The Great Carrying Place to the Six Nations (Iroquois), or the Haudenosaunee in their language. These names refer to a portage road or path between the Mohawk River to the east, which flows east to the Hudson River; and Wood Creek to the west, which flows into Lake Ontario. Now located within the modern Rome city limits, this short portage path was the only overland section of a water trade route stretching more than 1,000 miles between Lake Ontario and the lower Hudson. Travelers and traders coming up the Mohawk River from the Hudson had to transfer their cargo and boats and transport them overland between 1.7 and six miles (depending on the season) to continue west on Wood Creek to Lake Ontario. This ancient trade route joined the Great Lakes and Canada via the Mohawk River to the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean.