Quarter Horses for Sale near Ocean View, DE

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Georgetown, DE 19947
Ginger
Beautiful mare was used as barrel horse and in many game shows that she had..
Georgetown, Delaware
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
15
Georgetown, DE
DE
$1,800
Quarter Horse Stallion
Sonny is a beautiful palamino gelding with a excellent pedigree that inclu..
Federalsburg, Maryland
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Federalsburg, MD
MD
$1,800
Quarter Horse Mare
This is a beautiful strong AQHA broodmare, she has the bloodlines for spee..
Cape May, New Jersey
Brown
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Cape May, NJ
NJ
$800
Quarter Horse Mare
This is a beautiful strong AQHA broodmare, she has good bone and nice conf..
Cape May, New Jersey
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Cape May, NJ
NJ
$850
Quarter Horse Stallion
Impulsive Little Man ( Rango) has Star , left hind sock with partial white ..
Dover, Delaware
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Dover, DE
DE
$10,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
I have had this horse since he was two. He has done 4- H when I was younger..
Millsboro, Delaware
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Millsboro, DE
DE
$10,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
This is a nice 9 yr old horse but to much for me. I am a beginner and this ..
Chincoteague, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Chincoteague, VA
VA
$1,000
1

About Ocean View, DE

Until the late 17th century, European settlers bypassed the area where Ocean View now lies because of the poor quality of its sandy, salty soil and the salt air that blew in from the Atlantic Ocean; they preferred to settle a few miles farther inland, where the land was higher and drier and the soil richer. Would-be settlers also faced a legal complication in obtaining land in what is now Ocean View, because Lord Baltimore claimed the area as part of his Maryland colony, while William Penn asserted that the area belonged to the Delaware Colony; settlers opted to look elsewhere for land to which they could receive clear title from an undisputed authority. Ocean View traces it origins to 1688, when Lord Baltimore gave a 500-acre (200-hectare) tract of land in what is now Ocean View to its first settler, Matthew Scarborough. Scarborough named his land "Middlesex," and the land became known as Middlesex Plantation. Although the dispute over control of the land eventually was decided in favor of Penn and the land became part of Delaware, Delaware authorities confirmed Scarborough's title to the land as granted by Lord Baltimore.