Quarter Horses for Sale in Ridgely MD, Reston VA

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Quarter Horse Mare
This mare is very flashy with a lot of white. She~s got a laid back disposi..
Ridgely, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$3,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Junior is going to mature to be a nice horse. He~s been started on a lunge ..
Ridgely, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$1,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Tess is a very flashy and solid built filly with four white legs. Both sire..
Ridgely, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$2,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Jorge is a very affectionate colt and a nice riding prospect. Both his sire..
Ridgely, Maryland
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$2,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Shown in local Snaffle Bit Futurities as a 2 and 3 year old and placed in t..
Ridgely, Maryland
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Ridgely, MD
MD
$9,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
This horse has it all. . . Size, breeding, confirmation, and disposition. ..
Reston, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Reston, VA
VA
$4,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Flashy Red Roan Quarter Horse filly with Two Eyed Jack breeding. This fill..
Reston, Virginia
Red Roan
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Reston, VA
VA
$1,500
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About Annapolis, MD

A settlement in the Province of Maryland named "Providence" was founded on the north shore of the Severn River on the middle Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay in 1649 by Puritan exiles from the Province/Dominion of Virginia led by third Proprietary Governor William Stone (1603–1660). The settlers later moved to a better-protected harbor on the south shore. The settlement on the south shore was initially named "Town at Proctor's," then "Town at the Severn," and later " Anne Arundel's Towne" (after Lady Ann Arundell (1616–1649), the wife of Cecilus Calvert, second Lord Baltimore, who died soon afterwards). In 1654, after the Third English Civil War, Parliamentary forces assumed control of the Maryland colony and Stone went into exile further south across the Potomac River in Virginia. Per orders from Charles Calvert, fifth Lord Baltimore, Stone returned the following spring at the head of a Cavalier royalist force, loyal to the King of England.