Draft Horses for Sale near Chambersburg, PA

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Draft - Horse for Sale in Gardners, PA 00000
Sakari
Horse is available on www.horseporium.com Please check her out on that page..
Gardners, Pennsylvania
Bay
Draft
Mare
14
Gardners, PA
PA
Contact
Belgian Draft - Horse for Sale in Gardners, PA 17324
Roxie
Take a look at our beautiful Roxie. This girl is approx 15 years old and st..
Gardners, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Belgian Draft
Mare
18
Gardners, PA
PA
$4,500
Belgian Draft - Horse for Sale in Gardners, PA 17324
Lexy
Lexy is an approx 15 year old, 17 hands tall Belgian Mare. Advanced Beginne..
Gardners, Pennsylvania
Silver Dapple
Belgian Draft
Mare
18
Gardners, PA
PA
$4,500
Haflinger Mare
Registered filly is friendly and gentle. She has been handled by both adul..
Williamsburg, Pennsylvania
Haflinger
Mare
-
Williamsburg, PA
PA
$2,000
Haflinger Stallion
Registered Halflinger stallion has recently been green broke. Friendly wit..
Williamsburg, Pennsylvania
Haflinger
Stallion
-
Williamsburg, PA
PA
$3,500
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About Chambersburg, PA

Native Americans living or hunting in the area during the 18th century included the Iroquois, Lenape and Shawnee. The Lenape lived mostly to the east, with the Iroquois to the north and the Shawnee to the south. Traders, hunters and warriors traveled on the north-south route sometimes called the "Virginia path" through the Cumberland Valley, from New York through what became Carlisle and Shippensburg, then through what would become Hagerstown, Maryland, crossing the Potomac River into the Shenandoah Valley. Benjamin Chambers, a Scots-Irish immigrant, settled "Falling Spring" in 1730, building a grist mill and saw mill by a then-26-foot-high (7.9 m) waterfall where Falling Spring Creek joined Conococheague Creek. The creek provided power for the mills, and soon a settlement grew and became known as "Falling Spring." On March 30, 1734, Chambers received a "Blunston license" for 400 acres (160 ha), from a representative of the Penn family, but European settlement in the area remained of questionable legality until the treaty ending the French and Indian War, because not all Indian tribes with land claims had signed treaties.