Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Kingsville, MD

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Spring Grove, PA 17362
Aspen
Good on trails. Loads great. Confident rider. Looking for forever home. Ve..
Spring Grove, Pennsylvania
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
18
Spring Grove, PA
PA
$3,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
Pearl is a beautiful TWH who is grey with a roan undercoat. I have to sell..
Perry Hall, Maryland
Gray
Tennessee Walking
Mare
15
Perry Hall, MD
MD
Contact
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Very nice trail mount, smooth gaits, previously was a childs trail mount i..
Stewartstown, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Stewartstown, PA
PA
$2,800
Tennessee Walking Stallion
For lease only. Sparkles is a flashy guy who wants to please. He has been ..
Kingsville, Maryland
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Kingsville, MD
MD
$350
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Handsome, calm, smooth, puppy dog personality, trail blazer. He is a grea..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Lancaster, PA
PA
$6,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
"Pusher's Hobo" is a small horse, bay, all around great horse, beginner saf..
Columbia, Pennsylvania
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Columbia, PA
PA
$1,500
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About Kingsville, MD

Kingsville takes its name from Abraham King (1760–1836), who died there on December 15 at the age of 76. King, a native of Willistown Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, acquired some 290 acres (1.2 km 2) of land from Thomas Kell (a county judge) in and about the site of Kingsville from parts of the original grants of Leaf's Chance, William the Conqueror, Selby's Hope, John's Delight and Onion's Prospect Hill, according to a deed executed May 13, 1816. King lived in the old Hugh Deane-John Paul mansion (later known as the Kingsville Inn and presently as the Lassahn Funeral home on Belair Road) with his wife Elizabeth Taylor, a sister of the Hon. John Taylor of Willistown, who settled in the West and was the Chief Judge of the Superior Court of Mississippi for a number of years. An 1823 assessment of Old District 2 showed "Abraham King with 290 acres of 'William the Conqueror' and $350 worth of improvements, no slaves." The King family operated a tavern according to an 1847 advertisement in American Farmer (a pioneer agricultural journal) at the forks of Bel Air and Joppa (presumably present day Jerusalem) roads.