All-Around Horses for Sale near Magnolia, MS

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Appaloosa - Horse for Sale in Summit, MS 39666
Debo
Coming 4 year old gelding, great temperament and smart. He works off leg pr..
Summit, Mississippi
Black
Appaloosa
Gelding
5
Summit, MS
MS
$9,000
Saddlebred - Horse for Sale in Sandy HooK, MS 39478
Juice
Just turned 3 great gate racking horse won a few shows for his rack he is v..
Sandy Hook, Mississippi
Brown
Saddlebred
Gelding
5
Sandy Hook, MS
MS
$4,500
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Folsom, LA 70437
Big Chief
Well Breed Thourobred Stallion 3yo broke Not registered Ready to go to work..
Folsom, Louisiana
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
8
Folsom, LA
LA
$1,000
Half Arabian Mare
Flashy filly, with two hind socks and a star. Eligible for registration wi..
Franklinton, Louisiana
Buckskin
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Franklinton, LA
LA
$1,200
Quarter Horse Stallion
PRince will make someone a nice first time horse owners horse. Like most o..
Ruth, Mississippi
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Ruth, MS
MS
$600
Quarter Horse Mare
ROSIE IS BOMB PROOF. Big, Muscular power horse with lots of SPUNK for her a..
Albany, Louisiana
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Albany, LA
LA
$1,800
Quarter Horse Mare
ROSIE is very muscular with lots of spirt for her age. Always ready for wor..
Albany, Louisiana
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Albany, LA
LA
$1,800
Quarter Horse Stallion
Zippy has done parades, roping, Rodeo drill team, Trail rides, kids ride hi..
Franklinton, Louisiana
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Franklinton, LA
LA
$2,200
1

About Magnolia, MS

Magnolia was founded in 1856 by Ansel H. Prewett, a local civic leader and cotton planter. Knowing that the approaching New Orleans, Jackson, and Great Northern Railroad (now the Illinois Central Railroad) would need a station for water and fuel, Prewett sold a right-of-way to the railroad company – for one dollar, according to legend – and divided a section of his plantation into town lots, which he sold to investors. Prewett, while serving as temporary sheriff of Pike County, was killed by outlaws in the early 1870s escorting a prisoner on the very railroad that made Magnolia a viable community. Magnolia grew rapidly in the 1860s, and in the late nineteenth century Magnolia served as a popular small-town resort for wealthy New Orleanians, who took trains north from New Orleans to enjoy Magnolia's fresh air and sparkling creeks.