Show Horses for Sale near New Preston, CT

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Friesian - Horse for Sale in Millbrook, NY 12545
Friesian Gelding
For more photos please visit: https://www.equine.com/horses-for-sale/horse-..
Millbrook, New York
Black
Friesian
Gelding
13
Millbrook, NY
NY
$27,500
Hackney Stallion
Owner retiring due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. Sh..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Stallion
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$2,500
Hackney Stallion
Owner retiring due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. Li..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Bay
Hackney
Stallion
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$1,000
Shetland Pony Mare
"Goldie" is an eye - catching sweet little pony. She w / t / c and jumps ..
Bethel, Connecticut
Palomino
Shetland Pony
Mare
-
Bethel, CT
CT
$2,500
Morgan Mare
Savannah is a coming 5 year old mare that has had 4 months of professional ..
Highland, New York
Chestnut
Morgan
Mare
-
Highland, NY
NY
$4,500
Hackney Stallion
Just N Gogetter (AHHS #23156) (Dun - Haven Celebrity X Gentleman's Midnigh..
Middletown, Connecticut
Bay
Hackney
Stallion
-
Middletown, CT
CT
$3,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
2002 Registered Quarter Horse gelding. Sweet disposition. Green broke, lun..
North Haven, Connecticut
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
North Haven, CT
CT
$4,800
Welsh Pony Stallion
peter is a welsh cross black and white he has shown alittle. He is well nat..
New Paltz, New York
Black
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
New Paltz, NY
NY
$1,800
1

About New Preston, CT

Archeological evidence suggests that Native Americans first settled in the area around 10,000 years ago, following the retreat of the glaciers at the conclusion of the last ice age. What is now known as New Preston came to be inhabited by the Wyantenock tribe of Native Americans, who spent summers at Lake Waramaug, establishing a pattern of seasonal residence that is widely repeated by New Preston's present-day occupants. The signature of Chief Waramaug, who led the Wyantenock tribe in the early 18th century, appears on several local colonial-era property records, including the " New Milford North Purchase", which encompassed a substantial swath of southern Litchfield County, including contemporary New Preston. Colonists settled New Preston in 1741, and the General Assembly of the Connecticut Colony granted a petition for the establishment of the New Preston Ecclesiastical Society in 1753. In April 1778 the 270 families living in the area petitioned the General Assembly to be incorporated as a town.