Show Horses for Sale in Alliance OH, Medina OH

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Paso Fino Mare
Enamorada is an Ensueno de columbia granddaughter. She has a wonderful pers..
Alliance, Ohio
Bay
Paso Fino
Mare
-
Alliance, OH
OH
$5,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Zip will make a great 4H / open show horse, I am in school and have no extr..
Medina, Ohio
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Medina, OH
OH
$6,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Walnut Hill Tennessee Walker of Ohio Dedicated breeders of the natural Tenn..
Salem, Ohio
Pinto
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Salem, OH
OH
$400
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Walnut Hill Tennessee Walker of Ohio Dedicated breeders of the natural Tenn..
Salem, Ohio
Pinto
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Salem, OH
OH
$3,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Chippy's an extremely gentle son of Zips Chocolate Chip. He is a very level..
Ashland, Ohio
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Ashland, OH
OH
$23,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
Beautifully marked 50 / 50 black and white Registered Tennessee Walking Hor..
Salem, Ohio
Tobiano
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Salem, OH
OH
$1,750
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Bud Is an excellent horse for a beginner, excellent manners, no vices. Just..
Hookstown, Pennsylvania
Red Roan
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Hookstown, PA
PA
$1,500
Other Mare
Registered Spotted Saddle Horse. Very exceptional 3 yr. old mare, gentle a..
Salem, Ohio
Black Overo
Other
Mare
-
Salem, OH
OH
$2,200
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About Canton, OH

Canton was founded in 1805, incorporated as a village in 1822, and re-incorporated as a city in 1838. The plat of Canton was recorded at New Lisbon, Ohio, on November 15, 1805 by Bezaleel Wells, a surveyor and devout Episcopalian from Maryland born January 28, 1763. Canton was likely named as a memorial to Captain John O'Donnell, an Irish merchant marine with the British East India Trading Company whom Wells admired. O'Donnell named his estate in Maryland after the Chinese city Canton (a traditional English name for Guangzhou) as he had been the first person to transport goods from there to Baltimore. The name selected by Wells may also have been influenced by the Huguenot use of the word "canton," which meant a division of a district containing several communes.