Paint Horses for Sale near Cranston, RI

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Paint - Horse for Sale in North Attleboro, MA 02760
Paint Gelding
PridesPaintedChampion (Rebel) is a 16 year old paint gelding. Rebel is a Wo..
North Attleboro, Massachusetts
Red Dun
Paint
Gelding
23
North Attleboro, MA
MA
$3,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in West Brookfield, MA
Paint Stallion
Financial situation FORCES listing. . . Colby is part of our family. He l..
West Brookfield, Massachusetts
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
West Brookfield, MA
MA
$1
Paint Stallion
Due to Financial situation I am forced to lease out my boy. . . I have bee..
West Brookfield, Massachusetts
Paint
Stallion
-
West Brookfield, MA
MA
Contact
Paint Stallion
ziggy is a wonderful, full of perosnality, flashy, paint gelding, many yr...
Attleboro, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Attleboro, MA
MA
$8,000
Paint Stallion
APHA 453, 611 Beautiful markings and one blue eye. Dakota has a sweet pers..
Quincy, Massachusetts
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Quincy, MA
MA
Contact
Paint Mare
Nice paint for free temporary lease. Goes Eng / Western, trails, shows, com..
Taunton, Massachusetts
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Taunton, MA
MA
Contact
Paint Stallion
Adorable 3y / o paint gelding ready to be started under saddle. he has grou..
Plymouth, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Plymouth, MA
MA
$2,000
1

About Cranston, RI

Much of the land was purchased by Roger Williams from the Narragansett Indians in 1638 as part of the Pawtuxet Purchase, and the first settler in the area was William Arnold, who was followed shortly by William Harris, William Carpenter and Zachariah Rhodes. Stephen Arnold, a brother-in-law of Rhodes and William Arnold, built a gristmill on the Pawtuxet falls and laid out the "Arnold Road" (modern-day "Broad Street") connecting it to the Pequot Trail leading to Connecticut. Arnold's son, Benedict Arnold, became the first Governor of Rhode Island under the charter of 1663. After area residents were unable to agree upon a name for a new town for decades, the Town of Cranston was eventually created by the General Assembly in 1754 from a portion of Providence north of the Pawtuxet River. Historians debate whether the town was named after Governor Samuel Cranston, the longest-serving Rhode Island governor or his grandson, Thomas Cranston, who was serving as Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives at the time that the town was created.