Youth Horses for Sale near Chittenango, NY

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Appaloosa - Horse for Sale in New Berlin, NY 13411
Molly Girl
This nice mare is road safe, ties, clips, trailers well, covered many miles..
New Berlin, New York
Red Roan
Appaloosa
Mare
15
New Berlin, NY
NY
$3,000
Paint Mare
Lakota Belle has excellent conformation and is a beautiful mover. She's a ..
Hartwick, New York
Chestnut
Paint
Mare
-
Hartwick, NY
NY
$28,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Registered 2 yr old AQHA - IF Filly, Sorrel w / hind sock & Blaze, Blondie..
Red Creek, New York
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Red Creek, NY
NY
$5,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Mindy is a beautiful 6 year old bay mare - grade but looks quarter horse. ..
Greene, New York
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Greene, NY
NY
$1,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
This is one big, quiet trail horse. No vices we are aware of. Sound, shod a..
Groton, New York
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Groton, NY
NY
$1,600
Appendix Stallion
Super nice big gelding for the bigger rider that needs a heavy set horse. H..
Groton, New York
Appendix
Stallion
-
Groton, NY
NY
$1,700
Quarter Horse Stallion
Cooper is one of a kinds, off a working ranch, he has no vices, is sound, h..
Groton, New York
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Groton, NY
NY
$1,650
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About Chittenango, NY

The name of the village is derived from the Oneida name for Chittenango Creek, Chu-de-nääng′, meaning "where waters run north." While the name "Chittenango" is often thought by locals to mean "river flowing north" or "where the waters divide and run north," a reference to the direction of water flow from the creek's point of origin to Oneida Lake, there is no derivation for these alternatives. On an 1825 map of the area, the village is called Chittening, a name used by early settlers which is thought to be derived directly from Chu-de-nääng′. According to American anthropologist Lewis H. Morgan who studied Iroquois customs and language in his 1851 book League of the Iroquois, the name "Chittenango" may have come from Chu-de-nääng′ Ga-hun′-da, a redundant combination of the Oneida terms for "Chittenango Creek" ( Chu-de-nääng′) and "creek" ( Ga-hun′-da). Initial growth of this village is largely attributed to the construction of the Erie Canal which officially opened in 1825, joining Buffalo on Lake Erie with Albany, the capital of New York, and the Hudson River.