Trail Horses for Sale in Yardley PA, Cream Ridge NJ

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Yardley, PA 19067
Quarter Horse Mare
Hudson is a 16.1+ 13 year old big bodied Quarter Horse gelding. He looks li..
Yardley, Pennsylvania
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
28
Yardley, PA
PA
$3,000
Missouri Fox Trotter - Horse for Sale in Cream Ridge, NJ
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
Exceptional Mare! Puppy Dog Personality, Smooth, Natural, Barefoot Gait, F..
Cream Ridge, New Jersey
Black Overo
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Cream Ridge, NJ
NJ
$3,800
Rocky Mountain - Horse for Sale in Cream Ridge, NJ
Rocky Mountain Stallion
Easy going, gentle gelding. Not spooky, quiet, smooth gait, excellant trai..
Cream Ridge, New Jersey
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Cream Ridge, NJ
NJ
$5,000
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Cream Ridge, NJ
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Beautiful gelding, amazing gait! Loving personality, great ground manners. ..
Cream Ridge, New Jersey
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Cream Ridge, NJ
NJ
$5,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Oley, PA 19547
LEO
Leo is a 2011 AQHA grullo gelding registered name Plentyfoxleohancock. He i..
Oley, Pennsylvania
Grulla
Quarter Horse
Gelding
14
Oley, PA
PA
Sold
Toby
Toby Mac is a 6 year old 14.2h bay and white grade gelding. Partially gaite..
Oley, Pennsylvania
Bay
Pinto
Gelding
12
Oley, PA
PA
$6,500
Quarter Horse Gelding
roscoe has been fitted and ready to ride,He was shown as a weanling and was..
Shamong, New Jersey
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Gelding
13
Shamong, NJ
NJ
$3,000

About Camden, NJ

In 1626, Fort Nassau was established by the Dutch West India Company at the confluence of Big Timber Creek and the Delaware River. Throughout the 17th century, Europeans settled along the Delaware, competing to control the local fur trade. After the Restoration in 1660, the land around Camden was controlled by nobles serving under King Charles II, until it was sold off to a group of New Jersey Quakers in 1673. The area developed further when a ferry system was established along the east side of the Delaware River to facilitate trade between Fort Nassau and Philadelphia, the growing capital of the Quaker colony of Pennsylvania directly across the river. By the 1700s, Quakers and the Lenni Lenape, the indigenous inhabitants, were coexisting.