Youth Horses for Sale near East Hartford, CT

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Paint Stallion
Super sweet boy, well socialised, NOTHING wrong with him, just need the sp..
Torrington, Connecticut
Liver Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Torrington, CT
CT
Contact
Paint Stallion
Absolutely perfectly built well socialised colt. Very pretty, smart and ha..
Torrington, Connecticut
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
Torrington, CT
CT
$200
Pony Stallion
nice moving quiet pony wtc jumps trails clips loads barefoot easy keeper m..
Stafford Springs, Connecticut
Bay
Pony
Stallion
-
Stafford Springs, CT
CT
$1,800
Arabian Mare
WS Shardonnay (AHR #582418) (Brewmyster (Cognac) X Taaska Tiara (Taask) ) T..
Middletown, Connecticut
Gray
Arabian
Mare
-
Middletown, CT
CT
$4,500
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About East Hartford, CT

When the Connecticut Valley became known to Europeans around 1631, it was inhabited by what were known as the River Tribes — a number of small clans of Native Americans living along the Great River and its tributaries. Of these tribes the Podunks occupied territory now lying in the towns of East Hartford and South Windsor, and numbered, by differing estimates, from sixty to two hundred bowmen. They were governed by two sachems, Waginacut and Arramamet, and were connected in some way with the Native Americans who lived across the Great River, in what is now Windsor. The region north of the Hockanum River was generally called Podunk; that south of the river, Hockanum; but these were no certain designations, and by some all the meadow along the Great River was called Hockanum. In 1659, Thomas Burnham (1617–1688) purchased the tract of land now covered by the towns of South Windsor and East Hartford from Tantinomo, chief sachem of the Podunk Indians.