Trail Horses for Sale near Ashland, VA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Warmblood - Horse for Sale in Petersburg, VA 23805
M. Night
Are you searching for a horse that embodies talent, versatility, and heart?..
Petersburg, Virginia
Black
Warmblood
Gelding
10
Petersburg, VA
VA
$21,500
Welsh Cob - Horse for Sale in Gordonsville, VA 22942
Tuffy
12 yr. old Palomino gelding. Nice riding horse or school horse. 16 hands. S..
Gordonsville, Virginia
Palomino
Welsh Cob
Gelding
16
Gordonsville, VA
VA
Sold
Paint - Horse for Sale in Fredericksburg, VA 22407
Pearl
This is one beautiful 9 year old paint mare standing 15.1hh. She has gorge..
Fredericksburg, Virginia
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
7
Fredericksburg, VA
VA
$5,500
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Goldvein, VA 22720
Silver Ob
(PROJECT/PROSPECT!)Silver Over-Branch.. 10 year old OTTB for sale for no fa..
Goldvein, Virginia
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
13
Goldvein, VA
VA
$2,500
Other - Horse for Sale in Spotsylvania, VA 22508
Excalibur
If you are looking for a well built quarter horse draft cross than you have..
Spotsylvania, Virginia
Chestnut
Other
Gelding
18
Spotsylvania, VA
VA
$4,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Louisa, VA 23093
Quarter Horse Mare
Absolute wonderful horse to ride. Excellent trail horse. Runs barrels wit..
Louisa, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
23
Louisa, VA
VA
$3,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Diablo is a gorgeous Dun Palomino. He will be 3 years old on 5-23-08. He h..
Saluda, Virginia
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Saluda, VA
VA
$700

About Ashland, VA

The Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad initially developed the town in the 1840s as a mineral springs resort with a racetrack. The town was named "Ashland" after native son Henry Clay's estate in Kentucky and was officially incorporated on February 19, 1858. The area had been known as "The Slashes", sometimes translated as "swamp", but which also reflected the small ravines that formed in the sandy clay soil after hard rains. Confederate troops trained on the former racetrack early in the American Civil War, but the war and its aftermath devastated Ashland. Randolph–Macon College (founded 1830) moved to Ashland in 1868 and began using buildings of the bankrupt hotel as well as building additional structures.