Percheron Horses for Sale near Beaver Meadows, PA

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Percheron - Horse for Sale in Bath, PA 18014
Baybreeze
Flashy & Sweet 4yr old Bay well-bred & trained Quarter Horse Mare..
Bath, Pennsylvania
Gray
Percheron
Gelding
8
Bath, PA
PA
$5,900
Percheron - Horse for Sale in Bath, PA 18014
Liam
POWERFUL Grey (White) 18.1, 13 year old Percheron Gelding. Solid and 110%..
Bath, Pennsylvania
Gray
Percheron
Gelding
17
Bath, PA
PA
$6,900
Percheron Stallion
George aka Gary - White percheron gelding approx 15. 3 hands and late teen..
Bernville, Pennsylvania
White
Percheron
Stallion
-
Bernville, PA
PA
$650
Percheron Stallion
Percheron geldings Harry 12 yr old and Larry teenager - approx 16 hh saved..
Bernville, Pennsylvania
Gray
Percheron
Stallion
-
Bernville, PA
PA
$1,500
Percheron Mare
Black NASD (North American Spotted Draft) #1244 Doubletree Midnite Ruby - ..
Bernville, Pennsylvania
Black
Percheron
Mare
-
Bernville, PA
PA
$1,000
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About Beaver Meadows, PA

The town of Beaver Meadows began as a recognizable and describable 'landmark' — a meadow where beaver dams dotted the landscape — along a well-known Amerindian Trail, known as the "Warriors' Path", and later as well-known as the trail used by Moravian Missionaries traveling between Berwick and Bethlehem, then became known as a toll gate/rest stop along the Lehigh and Susquehanna Turnpike, a bridle trail and wagon road chartered in 1804 from Jean's Run near the mouth of Nesquehoning Creek on the Lehigh River in the hamlet and township of Lausanne about nine miles south on the other side of Broad Mountain. In the 1790s a large tract of land was registered in the name of tbdl and a few farm houses dotted the valley until in 1812, anthracite coal was discovered in the vicinity of Junedale, a bedroom suburb neighborhood a 1.33 miles (2.14 km) west of Beaver Meadows proper. In 1812, the secrets of burning anthracite were mostly yet to be discovered, revealed, and promoted (widely publicized) by Josiah White and Erskine Hazard but blacksmiths were several decades into knowing how to use it as an auxiliary fuel to complement bituminous or charcoal in forge fires, so by 1813 a modest pit mine was opened to provide coal for Berwick and Bloomington. The settlement's first dwelling was built in 1804 of logs. The first houses were built along the main thoroughfare, today's Broad Street east of the junction between Berwick St.