Ponies for Sale in Quaker City OH, Malta OH

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Pony Mare
Maggie is a 48" bay mare pony. Super pony for the price. Great 4H project...
Quaker City, Ohio
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$750
Pony Stallion
Rusty is a 50" bay gelding pony. Great 4H project. 8 yrs old. Quiet, frien..
Quaker City, Ohio
Bay
Pony
Stallion
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$750
Pony Mare
Maggie is a 48" bay mare pony. Great 4H project. 8 yrs old. Quiet, friendl..
Quaker City, Ohio
Bay
Pony
Mare
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$750
Pony Stallion
Jed is a 44" paint gelding pony. 8 yrs old. Quiet, friendly & gentle. He l..
Quaker City, Ohio
Other
Pony
Stallion
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$500
Pony Mare
Becky is a 46" black & white mare pony. 3 yrs old. Good color. Quiet, frie..
Quaker City, Ohio
Pinto
Pony
Mare
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$700
Pony Stallion
Blaze is a 47" chocolate gelding pony. 6 yrs old. Quiet, friendly & gentl..
Quaker City, Ohio
Chocolate
Pony
Stallion
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$650
Pony Mare
Becky is a 46" black & white mare pony. 3 yrs old. Good color. Quiet, frie..
Quaker City, Ohio
Other
Pony
Mare
-
Quaker City, OH
OH
$900
Pony Stallion
$600 obo pony / mustang cross small but stockey, broke to lead and hual..
Malta, Ohio
Bay
Pony
Stallion
-
Malta, OH
OH
$600
Pony Stallion
Sonny is a beautiful palomino gelding. Broke to ride and use to being arou..
Barnesville, Ohio
Palomino
Pony
Stallion
-
Barnesville, OH
OH
$1,000
2

About Lowell, OH

The first European settlers to the land that would become Lowell arrived in the late 18th century after the 1787 Northwest Ordinance opened the territory for settlement. Soon after the Ordinance took effect, the Ohio Company of Associates purchased 1,500,000 acres (6,100 km 2) of land along the Muskingum River and proceeded to survey the area. The first settlement in what would become the state of Ohio was Marietta, founded in 1788 near the mouth of the Muskingum about 14 miles (23 km) downstream from the site that would become Lowell. By 1789, settlement had spread north to the area where the Cats Creek enters the Muskingum River. By the 1830s the Muskingum Valley had long been settled, and local leaders created a plan to improve the Muskingum River for use as a source of power.