Ponies for Sale near Red Springs, NC

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Pony - Horse for Sale in Southern Pines, NC 28387
Pony Gelding
Pursuant to an Order filed in District Court in Orange County, North Caroli..
Southern Pines, North Carolina
Red Roan
Pony
Gelding
15
Southern Pines, NC
NC
Contact
Pony - Horse for Sale in Southern Pines, NC 28387
Pony Gelding
Pursuant to an Order filed in District Court in Orange County, North Caroli..
Southern Pines, North Carolina
Gray
Pony
Gelding
18
Southern Pines, NC
NC
Contact
Pony - Horse for Sale in Southern Pines, NC 28387
Pony Gelding
Pursuant to an Order filed in District Court in Orange County, North Caroli..
Southern Pines, North Carolina
Gray
Pony
Gelding
18
Southern Pines, NC
NC
Contact
Pony - Horse for Sale in Southern Pines, NC 28387
Sugar
Pursuant to an Order filed in District Court in Orange County, North Caroli..
Southern Pines, North Carolina
White
Pony
Mare
28
Southern Pines, NC
NC
Contact
Pony Mare
Star is an arab x pony that has predominantly schooled with natural horsem..
Lillington, North Carolina
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Lillington, NC
NC
$3,500
Pony Stallion
Sadly offering our pony! Joker is a phenomenal show pony and is consisten..
Fayetteville, North Carolina
Pony
Stallion
-
Fayetteville, NC
NC
$8,500
Pony Stallion
Beautiful Palomino Pony for Sale. $600. 11 hands high...
Raeford, North Carolina
Palomino
Pony
Stallion
-
Raeford, NC
NC
$600
Pony Stallion
Cute little pony. Owner has decided to let him go to a home that can give h..
Roseboro, North Carolina
Brown
Pony
Stallion
-
Roseboro, NC
NC
$650
1

About Red Springs, NC

Long before Red Springs was incorporated in 1887 and its postal name changed from its former name of Dora in 1884, one of the first settlers in this community was "Sailor Hector" McNeill. It is not known exactly how he got his nickname, but he is found using it in the Bladen County tax lists of 1771. (Red Springs is in Robeson County which was formed from Bladen County in 1787.) "Sailor Hector" McNeill's home was at the top of the hill on the edge of the McNeill cemetery in town, and he and his wife Mary are buried there in unmarked graves. In the decades before the Civil War up into the early 20th century the community was known as "The Springs", and it became a popular spa and resort in the mid-19th century. People of that time came from all parts to sample the sweet, iron-rich water and stay at the hotel there, built before 1854 by Malcolm C.