Welsh Ponies for Sale near Grand Ronde, OR

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Welsh Pony - Horse for Sale in Scio, OR 97374
Voodoo
Registered as half Welsh, (Dam is grade) "Dreamin of Deeja Blue" ..
Scio, Oregon
Gray
Welsh Pony
Stallion
2
Scio, OR
OR
$2,000
Petunia
Darling, 12.2 hand, 8 year old, Welsh mare, looking for new rider to grow w..
Wilsonville, Oregon
Blue Roan
Welsh Pony
Mare
13
Wilsonville, OR
OR
$6,500
Welsh Pony Mare
Gypsy Vanner Horse. Amazingly beautiful Filly. Loads of feather. Very colo..
Silverton, Oregon
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Silverton, OR
OR
$22,000
Welsh Pony Stallion
Tango is a beautiful Bay Cob stallion that has an incredible disposition, m..
Sheridan, Oregon
Bay
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
Sheridan, OR
OR
$650
Welsh Pony Stallion
Morgan is the IDEAL Section C Stallion. He has the Type, Conformation, Mov..
Sheridan, Oregon
Buckskin
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
Sheridan, OR
OR
$800
Welsh Pony Mare
Princess is a Bright Bay with lots of white fancy Half Welsh / Pinto 2 year..
Sheridan, Oregon
Chestnut
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Sheridan, OR
OR
$2,500
Welsh Pony Mare
Knotty is a 5 year Chestnut Roan Grand Champion Section B Mare. She has bea..
Sheridan, Oregon
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Sheridan, OR
OR
$5,000
1

About Grand Ronde, OR

On January 4, 1855, a treaty between the various bands of Kalapuyans and Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs Joel Palmer was effected, calling for the various bands to remove to a reservation to be established by the government. For this purpose the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation was opened on June 30, 1857, covering 60,000 acres in northwest Polk and southwest Yamhill counties. A census conducted in 1870 reported only 47 Yamels and 36 Luckiamutes on the reservation; in 1910 the Yamels numbered five, the Luckiamutes, eight. By the end of the historic period the Kalapuyan people no longer existed as a distinct cultural-racial entity. According to a Cultural Resources Report from the Oregon Department of transportation, [ citation needed ] the town of Grand Ronde began as "New Grand Ronde" in about 1908 when the first large groups of Indians were leaving the Reservation and establishing their own farms and ranches under the Dawes Act.