Show Horses for Sale near Holyoke, MA

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Hackney Stallion
Owner retiring due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. Sh..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Black
Hackney
Stallion
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$2,500
Hackney Stallion
Owner retiring due to ill health, price reduced, make reasonable offer. Li..
East Hampton, Connecticut
Bay
Hackney
Stallion
-
East Hampton, CT
CT
$1,000
Thoroughbred Stallion
i dont hve time to spend with cappy now and he needs someone to play with ..
Stafford Springs, Connecticut
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Stafford Springs, CT
CT
Contact
Hackney Stallion
Just N Gogetter (AHHS #23156) (Dun - Haven Celebrity X Gentleman's Midnigh..
Middletown, Connecticut
Bay
Hackney
Stallion
-
Middletown, CT
CT
$3,500
Appendix Stallion
TIMMY is a 5 year old appendix qh gelding. he stands at a true 16. 1 with a..
Granby, Massachusetts
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
-
Granby, MA
MA
$8,200
Quarter Horse Stallion
9 Year Old Quarter Horse; Excellent Western Trail and Show Experience; Will..
Cheshire, Massachusetts
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Cheshire, MA
MA
$3,500
Morgan Stallion
Springtown Champagne double registered AMHA for breed and PHBA for color is..
Spencer, Massachusetts
Palomino
Morgan
Stallion
-
Spencer, MA
MA
$750
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About Holyoke, MA

English colonists arrived in the Connecticut River Valley in 1633, when traders from the Plymouth Plantation established a post at Windsor, Connecticut. In 1636, Massachusetts Bay Colony assistant treasurer and Puritan iconoclast William Pynchon led a group of settlers from Roxbury, Massachusetts to the Valley to establish Springfield on land scouts had found to be advantageous for farming and trading. This settlement was built north of the Connecticut River's first major falls, Enfield Falls, where seagoing vessels had to transfer cargo into smaller shallops to continue northward on the river. Due to its proximity to the banks of the river Springfield quickly became a successful settlement on the Bay Path to Boston, as well as the Massachusetts Path to Albany. Originally, the settlement spanned both sides of the river but was partitioned in 1774 with the land on the western bank becoming West Springfield, Massachusetts.