Horses for Sale in Bovard PA, Butler PA

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Betty Johnston
Looking for a horse suitable for riding lessons..
Bovard, Pennsylvania
Bay
Draft
Gelding
15
Bovard, PA
PA
$3,000
Dandy
This little mare is undoubtedly one of the smallest, most correct Miniatur..
Butler, Pennsylvania
Gray
Miniature
Mare
12
Butler, PA
PA
Contact
Thoroughbred Mare
Seeking the Summit is schooling training level dressage and is a good mover..
Fairoaks, Pennsylvania
Black
Thoroughbred
Mare
12
Fairoaks, PA
PA
$1,200
Warmblood Stallion
Hodie is a 10 year old Warmblood cross horse with level one dressage traini..
Murrysville, Pennsylvania
Piebald
Warmblood
Stallion
19
Murrysville, PA
PA
$8,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Registered TWHBEA. 11 year old black mare. Very smooth gaited, wonderful t..
Portersville, Pennsylvania
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Portersville, PA
PA
$600
Tennessee Walking Mare
great trail horse, for intermediate to advanced rider. not spooky. stands ..
Portersville, Pennsylvania
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Portersville, PA
PA
$800
Paso Fino Stallion
Tesoro is the perfect ~all around~ horse. He has been ridden extensively ..
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Bay
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Pittsburgh, PA
PA
$4,000

About McKeesport, PA

David McKee emigrated from Scotland and was the first permanent white settler at the forks of the Monongahela and Youghiogheny Rivers, the site of present-day McKeesport, in 1755. The Colonial Government granted to him exclusive right of ferrage over those rivers on April 3, 1769, called "McKee's Port " His son, John McKee, an original settler of Philadelphia, built a log cabin at this location. After taking over his father's local river ferry business, he devised a plan for a city to be called McKee's Port in 1795. John set out his proposal in the Pittsburgh Gazette , as part of a program under which new residents could purchase plots of land for $20.00 (a lottery was used to distribute the plots to avoid complaints from new land owners concerning "inferior" locations). Around the time of the French and Indian Wars, George Washington often came to McKeesport to visit his friend, Queen Alliquippa, a Seneca Indian ruler.