All-Around Horses for Sale near Hallowell, ME

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Augusta, ME 04330
Laurentine
Our Horses are ready to join a new family/Ranch. Check on our website; www...
Augusta, Maine
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
13
Augusta, ME
ME
$2,800
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Lewiston, ME 04240
Laurentine
Our Horses are ready to join a new family/Ranch. Check on our website; www...
Lewiston, Maine
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
13
Lewiston, ME
ME
$2,800
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Portland, ME 04101
Laurentine
Our Horses are ready to join a new family/Ranch. Check on our website; www...
Portland, Maine
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
13
Portland, ME
ME
$2,800
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Madison, ME 04950
Blackberry
Trail horse deluxe. As unflappable on the trail as they come...
Madison, Maine
Black
Quarter Horse
Mare
16
Madison, ME
ME
$2,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Triple registered N / N filly enrolled in the Incentive Fund and the Breed..
Hallowell, Maine
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Hallowell, ME
ME
$4,500
Swedish Warmblood Mare
Mariah is a flashy chestnut filly now being offered for sale for a limited ..
Portland, Maine
Chestnut
Swedish Warmblood
Mare
-
Portland, ME
ME
$13,000
Swedish Warmblood Mare
Angel is now available for sale. Her name says it all. She is such a doll...
Portland, Maine
Bay
Swedish Warmblood
Mare
-
Portland, ME
ME
$8,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Have video and pictures available upon request! Well mannered, proven show..
Winslow, Maine
Gray
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Winslow, ME
ME
$10,000
Appaloosa Stallion
"Drew" is a people - loving, 15. 1 hand, bay registered Appaloosa gelding. ..
Belfast, Maine
Bay
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Belfast, ME
ME
$2,000
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About Hallowell, ME

The city is named for Benjamin Hallowell, a Boston merchant and one of the Kennebec Proprietors, holders of land originally granted to the Plymouth Company by the British monarchy in the 1620s. First to settle here was Deacon Pease Clark, who emigrated with his wife and son Peter from Attleborough, Massachusetts, in the spring of 1762. Legend has it that after disembarking on the west side of the Kennebec, near present-day Water Street, the Clarks took shelter in their overturned cart. On a riverfront lot measuring 50 rods (275 yards, about 250 meters), the Clark family raised corn, rye and other crops. The first land they cleared was occupied by the fire department in 1859.