Roping Horses for Sale near Seven Valleys, PA

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Newville, PA 17241
Peanut
Genuine Rita Lena is a 17 yr old registered Quarter Horse. He is ready to ..
Newville, Pennsylvania
Bay
Quarter Horse
Gelding
20
Newville, PA
PA
$9,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Lancaster, PA 17516
Bigs
Here is your next good using horse! “Big Sexy” aka Bigs, is a 15.2 hand Qua..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Black
Quarter Horse
Gelding
10
Lancaster, PA
PA
$12,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Lancaster, PA 17516
Choctaw
Choctaw is a 6 year old paint gelding standing at 14.2 hands. Choctaw has b..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Tobiano
Paint
Gelding
11
Lancaster, PA
PA
$5,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Buck has shown at all levels for reining and team roping as well as been a ..
Manheim, Pennsylvania
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Manheim, PA
PA
$1,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Stocky thick build solid horse. I have done a little of everything with Pri..
Manheim, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Manheim, PA
PA
$3,000
Paint Stallion
5 month old paint colt, awesome bloodlines (out of Paint Me Hobby, champion..
Hummelstown, Pennsylvania
Paint
Stallion
-
Hummelstown, PA
PA
$1,000
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About Seven Valleys, PA

The Seven Valleys basin was settled by forty families of the German Lutheran and Reformed faiths. They originated in the Hunsruck Mountains of the Rhineland Palatinate and arrived in this valley of the Codorus during the early fall of 1738. The lush meadows and gently rolling hills here reminded them of their homeland, even to the presence of seven valleys in the vicinity, and they called it Das Siebenthal, which in German means Seven Valleys. By 1752 these religious hardworking farmers had organized churches and parochial schools, and holding fast to their German heritage, worshipped God and taught their children in the Pfalzer dialect of the German language for nearly 150 years. With the coming of the railroad in 1838 and the opportunity to trade commercially with the outside world, the use of the English language gradually crept into the culture and by the end of the Civil War the use of German slowly began fading into the background.