Team Penning Horses for Sale near Newtown Square, PA

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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
9
Lancaster, PA
PA
$12,000
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
Quarter Horse Stallion
tuff is a great horse for the money i hate to part with him but he is a lit..
Sewell, New Jersey
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Sewell, NJ
NJ
$3,500
Paint Stallion
Maverick: 6 / 1 / 01 Paint gelding who stands approximately 14 hands as a y..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Paint
Stallion
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$4,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Wrangler: 5 / 4 / 00 QH grade gelding 14. 3 (and growing) . Wrangler is a v..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$5,150
Quarter Horse Mare
Sassafras: 4 / 1 / 97 QH grade Mare 15. 1 Hands. Sass is a very quiet horse..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Black
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$5,900
Quarter Horse Stallion
We have quite a few horses for sale starting at $5, 000. All are very soun..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Lancaster, PA
PA
$5,000
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About Newtown Square, PA

The first mention of the township was in 1684, when Thomas Norbury and John Humphrey were appointed collectors of the "Levie for the cort house and Prison for ye Township of Newtowne". Newtown Square was the name used for the townstead with the majority of early settlers being Welshmen. These Welsh "Friends" ( Quakers) needed a road to facilitate their journey to meeting, the only established road at the time being Newtown Street Road, which ran north and south. As such, in 1687, an east–west road was laid out (Goshen Road) so the Friends could attend either Goshen or the Haverford Friends Meeting. By 1696, these friends had become numerous enough to hold their own meeting in Newtown and continued to meet in a private home until the completion of the Newtown Square Friends Meetinghouse in 1711.