Horses for Sale in Toms River NJ, Quakertown PA

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Welsh Pony - Horse for Sale in Toms River, NJ
Welsh Pony Mare
Sm Childrens Pony Hunter. Kind and smart. Point and shoot. Took daughter..
Toms River, New Jersey
Gray
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Toms River, NJ
NJ
$14,500
Hanoverian - Horse for Sale in Quakertown, PA
Hanoverian Stallion
Ren has a big step and kind expression on course. He is a wonderful teache..
Quakertown, Pennsylvania
Bay
Hanoverian
Stallion
-
Quakertown, PA
PA
$15,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Levittown, PA
Paint Stallion
This boy has it all!!! Looks, disposition, and size. Classical Copy is 15'3..
Levittown, Pennsylvania
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Levittown, PA
PA
$2,000
Scooter boy
Scooter is a 15.2 hand quarter horse gelding that is very sweet. he has sho..
Schwenksville, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Gelding
9
Schwenksville, PA
PA
$14,000
Western
Medium-skilled NJ rider looking to purchase a gelding for western pleasure...
Sparta, New Jersey
Brown
Quarter Horse
Gelding
2
Sparta, NJ
NJ
$2,500
Popcorn
Popcorn..
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Palomino
Mustang
Gelding
2
Philadelphia, PA
PA
$3,500
Ketza
Ketza is a gorgeous 11 year old Arabian mare located in Spencer NY. This g..
New York, New York
Black
Arabian
Mare
8
New York, NY
NY
$3,500

About Somerville, NJ

Somerville was settled in colonial times primarily by the Dutch who purchased land from the English proprietors of the colony. The Dutch established their church near what is today Somerville and a Dutch Reformed minister or Domine lived at the Old Dutch Parsonage from about 1754. The early village grew up around a church, courthouse and a tavern built at a crossroads shortly after the American Revolution. The name "Somerville" was taken from four brothers of the Somerville family, William, Edward, John and James from Drishane and Castlehaven, County Cork, Ireland, who first founded the town in the 1750s. Somerville was originally a sparsely populated farming community, but rapidly grew after the completion of the railroad in the 1840s and development of water power along the Raritan River in the 1850s.