Reg. Tennessee Walker for Sale Or Trade!
Name
Breed
Tennessee Walking
Gender
Stallion
Color
Bay
Temperament
3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
14.0 hh
Foal Date
—
Country
United States
Views/Searches
602/33,721
Ad Status
—
Price
$1,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion for Sale in Columbia, PA
"Pusher's Hobo" is a small horse, bay, all around great horse, beginner safe. Needs exercise. Will go any where that you put him, only does not like metal sewer covers, but that is easy. Great ground manners, loves attention, you can walk right up to him in the pasture. I would be willing to trade him for a western pleasure horse. Sire: Pusher's Moving on, Dam: Bum's Black Shadow. Email for pictures. Asking 1500 firm, Or will trade. ~@~~~~~~~@T~~~~~~@~~~~T~~~d~~~\\~~~
Disciplines
About Columbia, PA
Early history [ edit ] The area around present-day Columbia was originally populated by Native American tribes, most notably the Susquehannocks, who migrated to the area between 1575 and 1600 [ citation needed ] after separating [ citation needed ] from the Iroquois Confederacy. They established villages just south of Columbia, in what is now Washington Boro [ citation needed ], as well as claiming at least hunting lands as far south as Maryland and Northern Virginia. Captain John Smith reported on the Susquehannock in glowing superlatives when a traveling group visited Jamestown, Virginia; he estimated their numbers to be about 2,000 in the early 1600s. The French ran across them in the area around Buffalo, apparently visiting the Wenro, and suggesting their numbers were far greater. The Province of Maryland fought a declared war for nearly a decade, signing a peace in 1632, against the Susquehannock Confederation who were allied to New Sweden and furnishing fire arms to the Susquehannocks in exchange for furs.