Horses for Sale in Franklinton LA, Hammond LA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
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
Quarter Horse Stallion
Currently Holding 2 nd place for the year at local show and performing Dril..
Franklinton, Louisiana
Black
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Franklinton, LA
LA
$2,000
Percheron Stallion
Tyler has excellent conformation and a wonderful loving temperment. He make..
Hammond, Louisiana
Black
Percheron
Stallion
-
Hammond, LA
LA
$300
Welsh Pony Mare
Used for pony parties, trail rides, parades, and pulling cart. Easy keeper,..
Folsom, Louisiana
Other
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Folsom, LA
LA
$700
Racking Stallion
Levi (Buck's Magic Man) is Bombproof, sound, well - trained, SAFE, healthy,..
Folsom, Louisiana
Buckskin
Racking
Stallion
-
Folsom, LA
LA
$4,500
Arabian Mare
Moondancer is a 4 yr old str egyptian filly by gc deja vu & raadin fatima. ..
Folsom, Louisiana
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Folsom, LA
LA
$10,000
Arabian Stallion
gc deja vu is a black sheykh obeyd double fabo grandson. . gentle beyond wo..
Folsom, Louisiana
Black
Arabian
Stallion
-
Folsom, LA
LA
$1,500
Arabian Mare
Gentle young maiden mare, has had alot of groundwork but never ridden. Gran..
Magnolia, Mississippi
Chestnut
Arabian
Mare
-
Magnolia, MS
MS
$1,000
3

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.