Paint Horses for Sale in Burnet TX, Blanco TX

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Paint Stallion
KOKOCOLORTYME : Beautiful APHA Black Tobiano Colt. Halter Broke. Gentle. Pl..
Burnet, Texas
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Burnet, TX
TX
$1,000
Paint Stallion
Copper sorrel w / 3 white stockings, blaze, flax mane & tail. Exc. conforma..
Blanco, Texas
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
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Blanco, TX
TX
$6,500
Paint Stallion
Koko K Dean is a beautiful black Tobiano stallion. His bloodlines are Man O..
Burnet, Texas
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Burnet, TX
TX
$225
Paint Mare
Beautiful Black Tovero Filly. Please visit our website for pedigree informa..
Burnet, Texas
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Burnet, TX
TX
Contact
Paint Mare
Beautiful Sorrel Filly. She may change color, her dam is gray. Please visit..
Burnet, Texas
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Burnet, TX
TX
Contact
Paint Stallion
Winner at "A" shows in Children / Adult Jumper. Sane, sound, clever and fa..
Austin, Texas
Paint
Stallion
-
Austin, TX
TX
$15,000
Paint Mare
Sodak Sunshine is a loudly colored Overo mare. She is a very smooth riding ..
Burnet, Texas
Red Roan
Paint
Mare
-
Burnet, TX
TX
$2,200
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About Marble Falls, TX

Marble Falls was founded in 1887 by Adam Rankin Johnson, a former Indian fighter and Confederate general, known as "Stovepipe" Johnson for his Civil War escapades, which included duping the Union army in Newburgh, Indiana, with fake "cannons," constructed from stovepipes and wagon wheels. Johnson had viewed the natural Marble Falls during his pre-war days as a Burnet County surveyor, and had dreamed of building an industrial city, powered by the tumbling Colorado River, not to be confused with the river of the same name in Colorado and Arizona. Despite a "friendly fire" incident which blinded him near the end of the Civil War, General Johnson followed through with his dream, facilitating the construction of a railroad to nearby Granite Mountain in 1884, then (with ten partners, including one son, one nephew and two sons-in-law) platting the townsite and selling lots, beginning July 12, 1887. Johnson built a fine home, a college (soon to be home of the "Falls on the Colorado Museum") and a large factory near the falls. The town grew to a population of 1,800 within ten years.