Ponies of the Americas for Sale near Wauseon, OH

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Pony of the Americas - Horse for Sale in Butler, IN 46721
Flicka
7 year old grade varnish POA mare (at 4H they measured her at 13h, but at h..
Butler, Indiana
Gray
Pony of the Americas
Mare
8
Butler, IN
IN
$3,500
Pony of the Americas Stallion
Flash has had professional training western and english. He has had beginn..
Hillsdale, Michigan
Roan
Pony of the Americas
Stallion
-
Hillsdale, MI
MI
$1,600
Pony of the Americas Mare
Jewel has awesome bloodlines. She's been used as a broodmare. She is green..
Hillsdale, Michigan
Pony of the Americas
Mare
-
Hillsdale, MI
MI
$2,000
Pony of the Americas Mare
Mae has been a joy to own. Her temperament is sweet. She was shown very su..
Hillsdale, Michigan
Buckskin
Pony of the Americas
Mare
-
Hillsdale, MI
MI
$1,500
Pony of the Americas Mare
Cookie has only been used as a broodmare with very little people time. She ..
Hillsdale, Michigan
Pony of the Americas
Mare
-
Hillsdale, MI
MI
$600
Pony of the Americas Stallion
"Nemo" is cute as a button and ready for anything. Placed in 2005 Futurity..
Camden, Michigan
Chestnut
Pony of the Americas
Stallion
-
Camden, MI
MI
$350
Pony of the Americas Stallion
got this horse this past fall, and he hadnt been handled since he was a wea..
Clarklake, Michigan
White
Pony of the Americas
Stallion
-
Clarklake, MI
MI
$2,700
Pony of the Americas Stallion
Casey is a very cute POA that has decorated a pasture for too long. Very p..
Brooklyn, Michigan
Pony of the Americas
Stallion
-
Brooklyn, MI
MI
$1,000
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About Wauseon, OH

Wauseon was platted 1853 when the Michigan Southern Air Railway was extended to that point . Land speculators bought 160 acres of land, which would become the City of Wauseon. The original name for the city was "Litchfield" after Litchfield, New York, where many of the city's new settlers had emigrated from. However, Hortensia Hayes, the daughter of an early settler, suggested that the new village be named after an Ottawa Tribe Chief named Wauseon, who was forced by the federal government to forfeit their land, before moving to Oklahoma in 1839. The village was incorporated in 1859.