Paint Horses for Sale near Schaghticoke, NY

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Petersburg, NY 12138
Marshall
Are you looking for your next project horse?Marshall is a green broke guy h..
Petersburg, New York
Chestnut
Paint
Gelding
9
Petersburg, NY
NY
$2,300
Paint - Horse for Sale in Lenox, MA 01238
Paint Gelding
Exuberant 11 year old Registered Paint Gelding! He loves life and is lookin..
Lenox, Massachusetts
Tobiano
Paint
Gelding
22
Lenox, MA
MA
$2,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Hudson, NY
Paint Mare
6 yr old unregistered black and white mare. Very sweet, willing, versatile..
Hudson, New York
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Hudson, NY
NY
$2,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Hudson, NY
Paint Stallion
2000 APHA black and white frame overo. Has some of the greats in his pedi..
Hudson, New York
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Hudson, NY
NY
$350
Paint - Horse for Sale in Hudson, NY
Paint Stallion
APHA registered chestnut tovero colt with partial blue eyes. He will matur..
Hudson, New York
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Hudson, NY
NY
$1,500
Paint Stallion
Jack is a 5 year old, 15 hand, solid chestnut paint gelding. He loves to t..
Granville, New York
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Granville, NY
NY
$2,500
Paint Stallion
Outsanding 2 year old stallion. If you are looking for pedigree, conformati..
West Pawlet, Vermont
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
West Pawlet, VT
VT
$2,000
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About Schaghticoke, NY

This area was historically occupied by the Mohican tribe, and later by a mixed group of Mohicans, and remnants of numerous New England tribes who had migrated west seeking to escape European encroachment. In 1675, Governor Andros, governor of the colony of New York, planted a tree of Welfare near the junction of the Hoosic River and Tomhannock Creek, an area already known as Schaghticoke, "the place where the waters mingle." This tree symbolized the friendship between the English and the Dutch, and the Schaghticoke Indians. The Native Inhabitants were Mohican refugees from New England welcomed to Schaghticoke because they agreed to help protect the English from the French and the Iroquois. They stayed until 1754. Prior to the proclamation of colonial independence, Schaghticoke was part of the colony of New York with most of its citizens governed by the city of Albany, which owned the land they rented.