Youth Horses for Sale near Richmond, CA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Santa Rosa, CA
Quarter Horse Stallion
Hi everyone, we have this cute gelding for sale - He can easily be a famil..
Santa Rosa, California
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Santa Rosa, CA
CA
$3,500
Thoroughbred Mare
This mare has excellent ground manners and a very sweet temperment. She is ..
Palo Alto, California
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Palo Alto, CA
CA
$500
Quarter Pony Stallion
Mickey is a 5 yr old Quarter pony gelding. He is completely broke and learn..
Daly City, California
Chestnut
Quarter Pony
Stallion
-
Daly City, CA
CA
$2,500
Quarter Pony Stallion
Black jack is a 12 yr old Quarter pony of America. He has been used for jus..
Daly City, California
Black
Quarter Pony
Stallion
-
Daly City, CA
CA
$2,300
Pony Stallion
He is a Stallion Grulla Pony, 1 Year old, Halter trained and now getting gr..
Castro Valley, California
Grulla
Pony
Stallion
-
Castro Valley, CA
CA
$900
Pony Mare
Mare, has had one baby with no problems, she is sound and has great riding ..
Castro Valley, California
Grulla
Pony
Mare
-
Castro Valley, CA
CA
$1,900
Pony Stallion
He is 8 years old, STOCKY built, Grulla in color, Pulls cart, and rides. NO..
Castro Valley, California
Grulla
Pony
Stallion
-
Castro Valley, CA
CA
$1,900
1

About Richmond, CA

The Ohlone were the first inhabitants of the Richmond area, settling an estimated 5,000 years ago. They spoke the Chochenyo language, and subsisted as hunter-gatherers and harvesters. The name "Richmond" appears to predate actual incorporation by more than fifty years. Edmund Randolph, originally from Richmond, Virginia, represented the city of San Francisco when California's first legislature met in San Jose in December 1849, and he became state assemblyman from San Francisco. His loyalty to the town of his birth caused him to persuade a federal surveying party mapping the San Francisco Bay to place the names "Point Richmond" and "Richmond" on an 1854 geodetic coast map, which was the geodetic map at the terminal selected by the San Francisco and San Joaquin Valley Railroad; and by 1899 maps made by the railroad carried the name "Point Richmond Avenue", designating a county road that later became Barrett Avenue, a central street in Richmond.