Warmblood Horses for Sale near Brattleboro, VT

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Warmblood Mare
Savannah LBA, 2006 Rheinland Pfalz Saar International reg / branded filly, ..
Ware, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Warmblood
Mare
-
Ware, MA
MA
$10,000
Warmblood Mare
Savannah LBA, chestnut filly by AHS approved stallion Scimitar. O / O AHH..
Ware, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Warmblood
Mare
-
Ware, MA
MA
$8,500
Warmblood Mare
Cosequin Champion, Calista LBA, offered for sale. 2x Horse Of The Year wi..
Ware, Massachusetts
Chestnut
Warmblood
Mare
-
Ware, MA
MA
$22,000
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About Brattleboro, VT

Because Native Americans in the region tended to name places and regions after their rivers or watersheds, the site of today's Brattleboro, the confluence of the West River and the Connecticut River, was called 'Wantastiquet' by the Abenaki people, a name meaning, according to various translations, "lost river", "river that leads to the west", or "river of the lonely way". Today known mostly by its English-translated name, the West River remains demarcated by New Hampshire's towering Mount Wantastiquet, rising 1,000 feet above water level directly opposite its mouth, and Lake Wantastiquet, near where it rises at its source. The Abenaki would transit this area annually between Missisquoi (their summer hunting grounds near the current-day town of Swanton) in northwestern Vermont, and Squakheag (their winter settlement or camps) near what is now Northfield, Massachusetts. The specific Abenaki band who lived here and traversed this place were called Sokoki, meaning "people who go their own way" or "people of the lonely way". The Abenaki's inclusive name for what is now Vermont was " Ndakinna" ("our land"), and in the 17th and 18th centuries, as more Europeans moved into the region, their often vigorous measures of self-defense culminated in Dummer's War (also known variously as Greylock's War, Three Years War, Lovewell's War, the 4th Indian War, and in Maine as Father Rasle's War).