Hunter Under Saddle Horses for Sale near Wheaton, MD

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in White Hall, MD 21161
Annie Oakley
Annie Oakley (JC: Lady's Lady) is a 2015 16.3 Mahogany Bay OTTB Mare locate..
White Hall, Maryland
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
10
White Hall, MD
MD
$6,000
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Dickerson, MD 20842
Prized Merry
Looking for a new home Prized Merry aka Jerusalem 7 year old 16.3 chestnut ..
Dickerson, Maryland
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Gelding
11
Dickerson, MD
MD
$4,500
Appendix Stallion
"Seymore" is by World Champion producer RR Slo Slippin Story o / o an 18h ..
New Market, Maryland
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
-
New Market, MD
MD
$1,500
1

About Wheaton, MD

Wheaton developed from Leesborough (named in 1826), a small business district which grew near the junction of three major roads: The first of these is Brookeville Pike (also known as the Washington-Brookeville Pike and later as the Union Turnpike, now Georgia Avenue) a north/south toll thoroughfare running from Washington, D.C., to Brookeville, and eventually to Baltimore. The second road, Veirs Mill Road (named after a grist and sawmill built on Rock Creek by Samuel Clark Veirs in 1838 ), was one portion of a much longer thoroughfare connecting westwards to Rockville, Maryland and thence towards the Potomac River and subsequently to Virginia via ferry crossings. This was also known as the "City Road" in Rockville, and around the time of the Civil War it was known also as the "New Cut Road." The last of these roads was known as Old Bladensburg Road (now University Boulevard) which, as it does in present day, connected Georgetown, Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Kensington, Wheaton, Silver Spring, and Bladensburg. The business district subsequently became known as Mitchell's Crossroads, named after Robert T. Mitchell's tavern, which was located at northeast corner of Union Turnpike (renamed from Brookeville Pike; now Georgia Avenue) and Old Bladensburg Road (now University Boulevard).