Fox Hunting Horses for Sale near Harrisburg, PA

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Other - Horse for Sale in Lancaster, PA 17516
Jinx
Jinx is a QH cross gelding standing at 14.2 hands. Jinx is spunky, upbeat, ..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Bay
Other
Gelding
16
Lancaster, PA
PA
$2,500
Belgian Warmblood - Horse for Sale in Middletown, PA 17057
Belgian Warmblood Gelding
Trojan would make a fabulous foxhunter. He hacks out alone and with company..
Middletown, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Belgian Warmblood
Gelding
20
Middletown, PA
PA
$12,000
Valentino
Valentino or “Tino” for short is a 15 year old Friesian/Belgian Cross geldi..
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Bay
Friesian
Gelding
18
Lancaster, PA
PA
$4,500
Welsh Pony Stallion
Welsh / Draft cross. 14. 1 hands. 5 yrs. Big, fat & cute as can be. Perfe..
New Bloomfield, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
New Bloomfield, PA
PA
$5,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
7- yr - old gelding Very successful first year at novice - pinned every tim..
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
Gray
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Chambersburg, PA
PA
$16,500
Thoroughbred Mare
7- yr - old very attractive mare Has evented through training level. Well s..
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Chambersburg, PA
PA
$8,000
Thoroughbred Mare
THis very cute mare loves poeple. shes full of energy and very athletic. sh..
Grantville, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Grantville, PA
PA
$1,400
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About Harrisburg, PA

Harrisburg's site along the Susquehanna River is thought to have been inhabited by Native Americans as early as 3000 BC. Known to the Native Americans as "Peixtin", or " Paxtang", the area was an important resting place and crossroads for Native American traders, as the trails leading from the Delaware to the Ohio rivers, and from the Potomac to the Upper Susquehanna intersected there. The first European contact with Native Americans in Pennsylvania was made by the Englishman, Captain John Smith, who journeyed from Virginia up the Susquehanna River in 1608 and visited with the Susquehanna tribe. In 1719, John Harris, Sr., an English trader, settled here and 14 years later secured grants of 800 acres (3.2 km 2) in this vicinity. In 1785, John Harris, Jr.