Gray Jumping Horses for Sale near White Plains, NY

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Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Dix Hills, NY 11749
Royal
Looking for his forever person. do health problems of owner hes looking fo..
Dix Hills, New York
Gray
Thoroughbred
Gelding
17
Dix Hills, NY
NY
$12,000
Thoroughbred Stallion
Good Mover. Cute Jumper. Fun to Ride..
New Vernon, New Jersey
Gray
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
New Vernon, NJ
NJ
$3,500
Irish Draught Stallion
Charlie just placed HIGH POINT HORSE AND RIDER of the lows at the June Prin..
Rockleigh, New Jersey
Gray
Irish Draught
Stallion
-
Rockleigh, NJ
NJ
$33,000
Dutch Warmblood Stallion
Achilles is a very smart and fun to ride, grey DWB with 3 smooth gates. Jum..
Pompton Plains, New Jersey
Gray
Dutch Warmblood
Stallion
-
Pompton Plains, NJ
NJ
$25,000
Thoroughbred Stallion
Versatile, easy to ride TB, trails, hunter pace, show ring. Impeccable grou..
New Milford, Connecticut
Gray
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
New Milford, CT
CT
$10,000
Hanoverian Stallion
Gemini is a talented horse. He free jumps 5 ft and jumps 3'6 under saddle. ..
Huntington, New York
Gray
Hanoverian
Stallion
-
Huntington, NY
NY
$20,000
1

About White Plains, NY

At the time of the Dutch settlement of Manhattan in the early 17th century, the region had been used as farmland by the Weckquaeskeck tribe, a Wappinger people, and was called "Quarropas". To early traders it was known as "the White Plains", either from the groves of white balsam which are said to have covered it, or from the heavy mist that local tradition suggests hovered over the swamplands near the Bronx River. The first non-native settlement came in November 1683, when a party of Connecticut Puritans moved westward from an earlier settlement in Rye and bought about 4,400 acres (18 km 2), presumably from the Weckquaeskeck. However, John Richbell of Mamaroneck claimed to have earlier title to much of the territory through his purchase of a far larger plot extending 20 miles (32 km) inland, perhaps from a different tribe. The matter wasn't settled until 1721, when a Royal Patent for White Plains was granted by King George II.