Ponies for Sale near Middletown, NJ

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Pony Mare
Made medium pony. Matilda, 13 year old, 13. 1~ hands (permanent card) , w..
Flemington, New Jersey
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Flemington, NJ
NJ
$10,000
Pony Stallion
Bombproof, sound, no vices. Great with kids of all ages. Loves to jump and..
Marlboro, New Jersey
Bay
Pony
Stallion
-
Marlboro, NJ
NJ
$7,500
Pony Mare
17 yr. Welsh cross mare, Chestnut with blaze; smart, willing. Longlines ar..
Lebanon, New Jersey
Chestnut
Pony
Mare
-
Lebanon, NJ
NJ
$800
Pony Mare
By Wynnbrook Starburst (AWR 1 st premium) and out of AWR Premier TB mare. F..
New Egypt, New Jersey
Chestnut
Pony
Mare
-
New Egypt, NJ
NJ
$3,000
Pony Stallion
Adorable Kids Pony for Sale. Firefly is a crossbred pony, 7 years old with ..
New Hope, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Pony
Stallion
-
New Hope, PA
PA
$2,500
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About Middletown, NJ

Small communities of the Lenape Navesink tribe were common throughout the area when the first known European landing in what would become Middletown Township occurred in 1609. Sea captain and explorer Henry Hudson, in search of the mythical Northwest Passage in the service of the Dutch West India Company, anchored along the shores of Sandy Hook Bay in 1609, describing the area "a very good land to fall in with and a pleasant land to see." While a patroonship was granted by the company in 1651 the land wasn't officially settled. Today's Shoal Harbor Museum and Old Spy House includes portions of a house constructed by Thomas Whitlock, one of the area's first European settlers (and a Reformed Baptist at Middletown ) who arrived here as early as 1664, around the time of the English takeover of New Netherland as a prelude of the Second Anglo-Dutch War. Long-standing tradition had Penelope Stout, one of the first settlers, hiding in a tree from hostile Native Americans. Shortly after the Dutch surrender of the New Netherland to the English in 1664 a large tract of land known as the Navesink Patent or Monmouth Tract was granted to Baptist and Quaker settlers from Long Island, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, which soon thereafter became the townships of Middletown and Shrewsbury.