Ponies for Sale near Forest Park, OH

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Pony - Horse for Sale in Versailles, IN
Pony Mare
Good all round pony. loves attention, pick up and hold all four feet no p..
Versailles, Indiana
Palomino
Pony
Mare
-
Versailles, IN
IN
$3,200
Pony Stallion
Pancake is the ideal partner for your young equestrian. He moves like a hu..
Richmond, Indiana
Buckskin
Pony
Stallion
-
Richmond, IN
IN
$6,500
Pony Stallion
Jersey is a good pony. He is a bit skittish on the ground, but once you ar..
Dry Ridge, Kentucky
Black Overo
Pony
Stallion
-
Dry Ridge, KY
KY
$400
Pony Mare
PRICE REDUCED Molly is a great little pony, has been ridden by small chi..
Dry Ridge, Kentucky
Gray
Pony
Mare
-
Dry Ridge, KY
KY
$275
Pony Mare
Penny is Suzie's foal and already as big as her Mama! Should make a nice l..
Dry Ridge, Kentucky
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Dry Ridge, KY
KY
$150
Pony Mare
Suzie is a nice little mare. Well mannered, leads well, easy to catch, get..
Dry Ridge, Kentucky
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Dry Ridge, KY
KY
$400
Pony Mare
Ruby is a red roan mini / pony cross. She will mature at 44" like her mot..
Butler, Kentucky
Red Roan
Pony
Mare
-
Butler, KY
KY
$600
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About Forest Park, OH

The City of Forest Park, Ohio was founded in 1956, two years after private developers Marvin Warner and Joseph Kanter purchased 3,400 acres of 5,930 acres north of Cincinnati originally set aside in 1935 by the Resettlement Administration under President Franklin D. Roosevelt to relocate struggling urban and rural families to one of three such communities planned by the government called Greenbelt towns. The Greenbelt concept was abandoned in 1949 and the as yet undeveloped acreage of Greenhills, Ohio, which had opened in 1938, became available for purchase by the Warner-Kanter Corporation in 1954. After two years of planning they opened homes for purchase in the first residential area of Forest Park, the C section, in March 1956. After growing to a population of 4800 in 1960 and incorporation as a village in 1961, then achieving city status in 1968, Forest Park intentionally became an “open city,” regularly adopting and passing resolutions and ordinances welcoming citizens regardless of race, creed or national origin, a policy intended to maintain the city’s commitment to diversity.