Driving Horses for Sale near Chantilly, VA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Spotted Saddle - Horse for Sale in Rockville, MD 20852
Spotted Saddle Gelding
Kroger is a kid broke spotted draft gelding , he is 12 years old. He rides ..
Rockville, Maryland
Pinto
Spotted Saddle
Gelding
20
Rockville, MD
MD
$3,500
Saddlebred Stallion
Prophet is fully papered well behaved guy, he has been started under saddl..
Poolesville, Maryland
Bay
Saddlebred
Stallion
-
Poolesville, MD
MD
$5,000
Welsh Pony Stallion
Ty is a very well bred reg 1 / 2 welsh, VPBA, 12. 1 1 / 2h, blue roan w / ..
Warrenton, Virginia
Blue Roan
Welsh Pony
Stallion
-
Warrenton, VA
VA
$500
Appaloosa Stallion
Chestnut with white and spots over hips. Still growing. Saddle trained. ..
Waldorf, Maryland
Chestnut
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Waldorf, MD
MD
$3,000
Morgan Stallion
Old Dominion 2005: 1 st, 3 & over Stallions In Hand - 1 st, Western Pleasu..
Boonsboro, Maryland
Bay
Morgan
Stallion
-
Boonsboro, MD
MD
$5,000
Percheron Mare
Scarlett is a gorgeous dapple grey mare, with a beautiful head, she drives ..
Strasburg, Virginia
Gray
Percheron
Mare
-
Strasburg, VA
VA
$5,500
Morgan Stallion
Venture has shown off - farm at SMHA shows in in - hand (conformation and t..
Harwood, Maryland
Bay
Morgan
Stallion
-
Harwood, MD
MD
$5,000
Friesian Stallion
STUNNING 5 yr. old imported Friesian gelding with stallion presence. Supe..
Warrenton, Virginia
Black
Friesian
Stallion
-
Warrenton, VA
VA
$25,000
Quarter Horse Mare
For Sale: Quarter Horse / Percheron mare;15. 1 hh; 15 years old. Molly is a..
Boyce, Virginia
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Boyce, VA
VA
$2,800
1

About Chantilly, VA

Chantilly was home to a number of colonial plantations in the 1700s, including the Sully Plantation (now the Sully Historic Site) built by Richard Bland Lee I. Other plantations included George Richard Lee Turberville's "Leeton Grove" (originally a 5,000+ acre plantation, the main house of which still stands at 4619 Walney Rd.), the John Hutchison Farm, and the Chantilly Plantation, after which Chantilly is named. Cornelia Lee Turberville Stuart, who was born at Leeton and was the daughter of George Richard Lee Turberville and Henrietta Lee, inherited a portion of Leeton in 1817 from her father. Stuart and her husband Charles Calvert Stuart, whom she had married in 1816, constructed the Chantilly Plantation and named it after the Westmoreland County plantation owned by her grandfather, Richard Henry Lee, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. During the Civil War, federal troops destroyed by fire the Chantilly Plantation manor house.