Trail Horses for Sale in Spring City PA, Allentown NJ

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Pony Mare
Black Velvet: 7 / 10 / 96 Shetland - cross mare 14 Hands. Black Velvet is a..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Black
Pony
Mare
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$4,200
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
Pony Mare
Shawnee: 9 / 1 / 94 Shetland - cross filly 14 Hands. Shawnee is a very nice..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Gray
Pony
Mare
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$4,200
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Julius: 7 / 13 / 99 TWH Gelding 15. 2 Hands (and still growing) . Julius is..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$5,100
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
Tennessee Walking Mare
Pushbutton: 4 / 24 / 93 Registered TWH mare 15 Hands. Pushbutton is a very ..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Bay Roan
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$4,500
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
Mocha: 5 / 5 / 98 MFT / TWH filly 15. 2 Hands. Mocha is currently being ri..
Spring City, Pennsylvania
Bay Roan
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Spring City, PA
PA
$5,100
Percheron Stallion
Tempered Cool Semen is avaliable. MidNight Crystal's Black Rose is a beauti..
Allentown, New Jersey
Black
Percheron
Stallion
-
Allentown, NJ
NJ
$400
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About Collingswood, NJ

The land in what is present day Collingswood was originally inhabited by Lenni Lenape Native Americans. Quakers from England and Ireland settled along Newton Creek and Cooper River in the late 17th Century, establishing what was known as the Newton Colony and eventually Newton Township. Much of what is now Collingswood was a farm owned by members of the Collings family during the 18th and 19th Centuries. Later a section of Haddon Township, Collingswood was incorporated as a borough by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on May 22, 1888, based on the results of a referendum held that same day. That same year, town resident Edward Collings Knight, a wealthy sugar, real estate and railroad magnate, donated the land that became Knight Park.