Trail Horses for Sale in Catawissa PA, Bloomsburg PA

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Half Arabian Mare
Good trail horse, used in 4- h for many years. Rides english or western. C..
Catawissa, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Catawissa, PA
PA
$700
Quarter Horse Mare
Kippie is about 14. 2 hh and is not done growing. She has been started engl..
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Bloomsburg, PA
PA
$2,400
Thoroughbred Stallion
This stallion is really nice and calm. HEs one of a kind and beautiful. He..
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Hamburg, PA
PA
$2,800
Quarter Horse Mare
If you are looking for your first horse to raise - this is she. Riot stands..
Hamburg, Pennsylvania
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Hamburg, PA
PA
$750
Dutch Warmblood Mare
Gorgeous bay tobiano Dutch Warmblood / TB mare from the Art Deco line. Supe..
Williamsport, Pennsylvania
Dutch Warmblood
Mare
-
Williamsport, PA
PA
$13,500
Paso Fino Stallion
Very friendly colt, halter broke and stands quietly and patiently while you..
Danville, Pennsylvania
Bay
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Danville, PA
PA
$5,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Strawberry is a very well behaved horse, she has been profesionally trained..
Dushore, Pennsylvania
Red Roan
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Dushore, PA
PA
$1,000
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About Millville, PA

John Eves, a native of Ireland living in Mill Creek Hundred, Delaware, is thought to have been one of the men to visit the Greenwood Valley and Little Fishing Creek area in 1770. (One account of this visit indicates that he purchased a sizable portion of the land he explored in the area from the Indians who had served as his guides on his journey.) Although he returned to Delaware after this initial visit, he returned the following year with his son Thomas and built a log cabin on the property. The entire Eves family arrived the next year, in 1772, and began tilling the fields adjacent to the cabin as soon as they could be cleared. In 1774, the Eves family received a deed for their 1,203-acre (4.87 km 2) property in the valley, the largest land holding at the time in what would later become Columbia County. Title for the land, originally obtained by William and Elizabeth McMean in 1769, was passed to Reuben Haines, and then to John Eves.