Trail Horses for Sale near Briarcliffe Acres, SC

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Paso Fino - Horse for Sale in Loris, SC 29569
Gracie
**Posting for a friend. Any questions please call the owner: Jeff 843-455-5..
Loris, South Carolina
Pinto
Paso Fino
Mare
7
Loris, SC
SC
$2,500
Paso Fino - Horse for Sale in Loris, SC 29569
Tess
**Posting for a friend. Please call owner Jeff with questions. 8434555339**..
Loris, South Carolina
Palomino
Paso Fino
Mare
22
Loris, SC
SC
$2,000
Appaloosa Stallion
Poco is a fine riding breeding horse! He colors the colts of most app mar..
Chadbourn, North Carolina
Red Roan
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Chadbourn, NC
NC
$3,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Shy is a big, stoud mare. She has a stud colt at her side that was born o..
Loris, South Carolina
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Loris, SC
SC
$2,500
Paint Mare
This is one pretty paint. She has 2 blue eyes, long stocking legs and big ..
Loris, South Carolina
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Loris, SC
SC
$1,700
Quarter Horse Stallion
Apollo: QH / Belgian, 15h / growing, 15 mths, gelding, great attitude, hand..
Surfside Beach, South Carolina
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Surfside Beach, SC
SC
$850
1

About Briarcliffe Acres, SC

Briarcliffe Acres was developed as a retirement community by Kenneth Ellsworth, a native of Briarcliff Manor, New York (from which he took the name of his project), who married Virginia (Ginny) Gasque (pronounced "gas-kwee" or, by some, "gas-kee"). Her family came from the nearby town of Conway, South Carolina. Briarcliffe was one of the first planned communities in the Southeast. In the early (pre-1930) parts of the 20th century, the coastal areas of northernmost South Carolina were used mostly as farming sites. (The real estate monolith now known as Burroughs and Chapin for decades was named "Myrtle Beach Farms".) Sea breezes washed nutrients on crops planted on sand dunes, much as now is done through roots in hydroponic gardens, and cotton and tobacco thrived; farmers from Loris, Galivants Ferry, Florence and other Lowcountry towns bought land on the coast for practical reasons and then spent summers with their families there, rather than stay in the hellish heat and sand fleas of their main farms.