Youth Horses for Sale near Vineland, NJ

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Elkton, MD 21921
Dear John
DJ is a 7 yo TB/Paint X gelding. He stands a solid 15.1 and is moderately b..
Elkton, Maryland
Tobiano
Paint
Gelding
12
Elkton, MD
MD
$3,700
Quarter Horse Stallion
Phoenix - 10 year old, 15. 3 hand, Chestnut, Quarter Horse, Gelding. Curre..
Vineland, New Jersey
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Vineland, NJ
NJ
$5,000
Paint Stallion
Homozygous tobiano paint, originally a lesson horse, disciplined in Englis..
Millville, New Jersey
Paint
Stallion
-
Millville, NJ
NJ
$3,800
Welsh Pony Stallion
Buster Brown (Welsh Cross) This flashy, strawberry roan, Welsh cross gel..
Pedricktown, New Jersey
Roan
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
Pedricktown, NJ
NJ
$12,000
Thoroughbred Mare
Ella is very level headed, willing, quiet, and loving. She is a doll baby,..
Franklinville, New Jersey
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Franklinville, NJ
NJ
$1,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Lucky is a 15 hand Quarter Horse. He has evented through novice. He never ..
Broomall, Pennsylvania
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Broomall, PA
PA
$11,000
1

About Vineland, NJ

Charles K. Landis purchased 30,000 acres (121 km 2) of land in 1861 and another 23,000 acres (93 km 2) in 1874, near Millville, New Jersey, and along the West Jersey railroad line with service between Camden and Cape May, to create his own alcohol-free utopian society based on agriculture and progressive thinking. The first houses were built in 1862, and train service was established to Philadelphia and New York City, with the population reaching 5,500 by 1865 and 11,000 by 1875. Established as a Temperance Town, where the sale of alcohol was prohibited, Landis required that purchasers of land in Vineland build a house on the purchased property within a year of purchase, that 2 1⁄ 2 acres (10,000 m 2) of the often heavily wooded land be cleared and farmed each year, and that adequate space be placed between houses and roads to allow for planting of flowers and shade trees along the routes through town. Landis Avenue was constructed as a 100-foot (30 m) wide and about 1-mile (2 km) long road running east-west through the center of the community, with other, narrower roads connecting at right angles to each other.