Horses for Sale in Portageville NY, Alden NY

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Tennessee Walking Stallion
This is a wonderful natured and well mannered stalion that would make an e..
Portageville, New York
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Portageville, NY
NY
$2,000
Appendix Stallion
"High Golden Shine" aka Blue is a wonderful natured stallion and very athl..
Portageville, New York
Cremello
Appendix
Stallion
-
Portageville, NY
NY
$650
Appaloosa Mare
Special Pre - Weaning Price! This filly is by the late ApHC versatility st..
Alden, New York
Chestnut
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Alden, NY
NY
$3,500
Half Arabian Mare
This filly had a sale pending to a upscale show barn in West Palm Beach th..
Alden, New York
Gray
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Alden, NY
NY
$5,500
Thoroughbred Mare
Beautiful, athletic registered Thoroughbred mare for sale. Would make a wo..
Clarence, New York
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Clarence, NY
NY
$10,000
Quarter Horse Mare
born 1 / 11 / 07 Buckskin w. sclera / mottled skin Sire:Kiotesamachohunk (..
Arcade, New York
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Arcade, NY
NY
$400
Appaloosa Mare
born 1 / 11 / 07 Buckskin w. sclera / mottled skin Sire:Kiotesamachohunk (..
Arcade, New York
Buckskin
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Arcade, NY
NY
$400

About Buffalo, NY

The first inhabitants of the State of New York are believed to have been nomadic Paleo-Indians, who migrated after the disappearance of Pleistocene glaciers during or before 7000 BCE. Around 1000 CE, 1,000 years ago, the Woodland period began, marked by the rise of the Iroquois Confederacy and its tribes throughout the state. During French exploration of the region in 1620, the region was occupied simultaneously by the agrarian Erie people, a tribe outside of the Five Nations of the Iroquois southwest of Buffalo Creek, and the Wenro people or Wenrohronon, an Iroquoian-speaking tribal offshoot of the large Neutral Nation who lived along the inland south shore of Lake Ontario and at the east end of Lake Erie and a bit of its northern shore. For trading, the Neutral people made a living by growing tobacco and hemp to trade with the Iroquois, using animal paths or warpaths to travel and move goods across the state. These paths were later paved, and now function as major roads.