Horses for Sale in Plymouth MA, Boston MA

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Friesian Mare
VERY FLASHY!!!! Priced to sell. Black and white paint FRIESIAN sport horse ..
Plymouth, Massachusetts
Tobiano
Friesian
Mare
8
Plymouth, MA
MA
$8,500
Gypsy Vanner Stallion
This colt is big boned and flashy and will be TALL. His dam WHR Aurelia is ..
Plymouth, Massachusetts
Tobiano
Gypsy Vanner
Stallion
8
Plymouth, MA
MA
$15,000
Quarter Horse Gelding
He has a very light responsive handle, athletic and finesse .He performs la..
Boston, Massachusetts
Gray
Quarter Horse
Gelding
-
Boston, MA
MA
$1,000
Arabian Stallion
The handsome guy is the most gentle stallion I have ever been around. He lo..
Brookfield, Massachusetts
Gray
Arabian
Stallion
26
Brookfield, MA
MA
$700
Arabian Mare
The mare is extremely flashy and a wonderful mother. She will excel in disc..
Brookfield, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Arabian
Mare
15
Brookfield, MA
MA
$7,500
Quarter Horse
very bad horse. kick my mother in face. knock over ALL the potatoes. say ru..
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Other
Quarter Horse
18
Cambridge, MA
MA
Contact
Thoroughbred Gelding
ninja is and unraced tb gelding. going well under saddle. walk/trots and ca..
Attleboro, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Gelding
16
Attleboro, MA
MA
$3,200

About Waltham, MA

Waltham was first settled in 1634 as part of Watertown and was officially incorporated as a separate town in 1738. Waltham had no recognizable town center until the 1830s, when the nearby Boston Manufacturing Company gave the town the land that now serves as its central square. In the early 19th century, Francis Cabot Lowell and his friends and colleagues established in Waltham the Boston Manufacturing Company – the first integrated textile mill in the United States, with the goal of eliminating the problems of co-ordination, quality control, and shipping inherent in the subcontracting based textile industry. The Waltham–Lowell system of production derives its name from the city and the founder of the mill. The city is home to a number of large estates, including Gore Place, a mansion built in 1806 for former Massachusetts governor Christopher Gore, the Robert Treat Paine Estate, a residence designed by architect Henry Hobson Richardson and landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted for philanthropist Robert Treat Paine, Jr.