Reining Horses for Sale near Allentown, PA

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Levittown, PA
Paint Stallion
This boy has it all!!! Looks, disposition, and size. Classical Copy is 15'3..
Levittown, Pennsylvania
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Levittown, PA
PA
$2,000
Scooter boy
Scooter is a 15.2 hand quarter horse gelding that is very sweet. he has sho..
Schwenksville, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Gelding
8
Schwenksville, PA
PA
$14,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Cooper is a nice 4 year old gelding well on his way. Has had professional ..
Effort, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Effort, PA
PA
$6,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Great palomino filly with foundation bloodlines. Great conformation and tem..
Kempton, Pennsylvania
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Kempton, PA
PA
$1,300
Quarter Horse Stallion
Older QH, good ground manners, wonderful disposition. Easy Keeper. Rides ou..
Bangor, Pennsylvania
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Bangor, PA
PA
$400
Half Arabian Mare
We have several Arabian / QH crosses for sale ranging from yearling to eigh..
New Tripoli, Pennsylvania
Bay
Half Arabian
Mare
-
New Tripoli, PA
PA
Contact
Pony Mare
This very pretty mare is a breedstock registered APHA mare who is a beautif..
Coopersburg, Pennsylvania
Chestnut
Pony
Mare
-
Coopersburg, PA
PA
$3,800
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About Allentown, PA

In the early 1700s, the land now occupied by the city of Allentown and Lehigh County was a wilderness of scrub oak where neighboring tribes of Native Americans fished for trout and hunted for deer, grouse, and other game. In 1736, a large area to the north of Philadelphia, embracing the present site of Allentown and what is now Lehigh County, was deeded by 23 chiefs of the five great Native American nations to John, Thomas, and Richard Penn, sons of William Penn. The price for this tract included shoes and buckles, hats, shirts, knives, scissors, combs, needles, looking glasses, rum, and pipes. The land that was to become Allentown was part of a 5,000-acre (20 km 2) plot William Allen purchased on September 10, 1735, from his business partner Joseph Turner, who was assigned the warrant to the land by Thomas Penn, son of William Penn, on May 18, 1732. The land was originally surveyed on November 23, 1736.