Paint Horses for Sale near Keyser, WV

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Paint Stallion
Dinker has been trail ridden, starting over fences and has been to one dre..
Petersburg, West Virginia
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Petersburg, WV
WV
$3,200
Paint Stallion
Doc has a great disposition, loves people and wants to please. We have don..
Winchester, Virginia
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Winchester, VA
VA
$2,400
Paint Mare
Potential, Potential Potential. This filly has got it all. Looks, Temperame..
Stephens City, Virginia
Paint
Mare
-
Stephens City, VA
VA
$4,000
Paint Stallion
"Golden Te" is a handsome sorrel overo who is quiet and gentle w / good gro..
Winchester, Virginia
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Winchester, VA
VA
$3,500
Paint Stallion
Great young gelding just turned 5 end of March, Out of the Mr. Norfleet lin..
Stephens City, Virginia
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Stephens City, VA
VA
$3,000
Paint Mare
Dawn McCue ("Falcon") is a talented, athletic, and smart mare that would ma..
Oakland, Maryland
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Oakland, MD
MD
$5,800
Paint Stallion
This colt has excellent conformation, temperament, easy to work with and wi..
Cumberland, Maryland
Paint
Stallion
-
Cumberland, MD
MD
$2,000
Paint Stallion
SOLD WIll have available a Full sister of his by Spring 2004. Have added a ..
Stephens City, Virginia
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Stephens City, VA
VA
$5,000
Paint Stallion
BS Paint / TB cross gelding. 20 months old, 15. 2 hands. Has Wonderful Pote..
Stephens City, Virginia
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Stephens City, VA
VA
$3,000
Paint Stallion
This is a Beautiful, Warmblood looking Paint / TB cross , gelding. 17 month..
Stephens City, Virginia
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Stephens City, VA
VA
$3,000
1

About Keyser, WV

Keyser, the county seat of Mineral County, is located on the North Branch of the Potomac River at its juncture with New Creek in the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia. Throughout the centuries, the town went through a series of name changes, but was ultimately named after William Keyser, a Baltimore and Ohio Railroad official. The first Europeans to pass through what would become present-day Keyser are believed to have been William Mayo and George Savage, sent by Lord Fairfax in 1736 to seek out the source of the Potomac River. The first local land grant was issued by Fairfax to Christopher Beelor on March 20, 1752. The place was first called Paddy Town, for Patrick McCarty, an Irish immigrant who came to then-Hampshire County, Virginia, sometime after 1740.