Reining Horses for Sale near National Park, NJ

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Levittown, PA
Paint Stallion
This boy has it all!!! Looks, disposition, and size. Classical Copy is 15'3..
Levittown, Pennsylvania
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Levittown, PA
PA
$2,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Palomino - Dun Strip. 75%Colour Producer. has the dun gene (red dun, dun, ..
Newfield, New Jersey
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Newfield, NJ
NJ
$2,500
Paint Mare
Nicely started under saddle. Already shows signs of a big stopper. Pretty ..
Salem, New Jersey
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Salem, NJ
NJ
$5,000
Pony Mare
This very pretty mare is a breedstock registered APHA mare who is a beautif..
Coopersburg, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Pony
Mare
-
Coopersburg, PA
PA
$3,800
Paint Stallion
90 days on him, he is atheletic and ready to please. extremely gentle..
Cedarville, New Jersey
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Cedarville, NJ
NJ
$3,500
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About National Park, NJ

In 1777, during the American Revolutionary War, the Continental Army under command of George Washington constructed two forts on the Delaware River to block the approach to Philadelphia: Fort Mifflin on the Pennsylvania side and Fort Mercer on the New Jersey side in what is now National Park. The fort was named in honor of Brigadier General Hugh Mercer who had died earlier that year at the Battle of Princeton. A park, monument, and museum commemorate the fort on its original site. On October 22 of that year, in what is known as the Battle of Red Bank, an attack by 900 Hessian troops, serving under British Major General William Howe, who then occupied Philadelphia, was repelled, with heavy losses on the Hessian side (including the death of their commander, Colonel Carl Emil Kurt von Donop) by the 600 Continental defenders under Colonel Christopher Greene. After the loss of Fort Mifflin, Fort Mercer was abandoned without a fight when Lord Charles Cornwallis landed 2,000 British troops nearby on November 18.