Reining Horses for Sale near Dewey-Humboldt, AZ

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Quarter Horse Mare
AQHA registered yearling filly Diamonds Smokey Firefly. Great Grand daught..
Cottonwood, Arizona
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Cottonwood, AZ
AZ
$2,500
Paint Stallion
Has shown in English, hunter hack class , reining and team roping at 4- H ..
Chino Valley, Arizona
Palomino
Paint
Stallion
-
Chino Valley, AZ
AZ
$3,000
Quarter Horse Mare
"EZ BABY" - What a BEAUTIFUL FILLY!! This little girls been imprinted, she..
Prescott, Arizona
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Prescott, AZ
AZ
$3,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
"MONTANA". . . He's a big guy who needs to get out on a daily basis & play ..
Prescott, Arizona
Sorrel
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Prescott, AZ
AZ
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Super bloodlines with King Fritz top & bottom, Chex on bottom, Leo top side..
Chino Valley, Arizona
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Chino Valley, AZ
AZ
$7,500
Paint Stallion
Very GENTLE, SWEET & SMART this 4 yr. old medicine cap is ready to go & wil..
Prescott, Arizona
Paint
Stallion
-
Prescott, AZ
AZ
$4,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Foundation bred AQHA reiner. King Fritz, Leo on top / Chex on bottom. Extre..
Chino Valley, Arizona
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Chino Valley, AZ
AZ
$7,500
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About Dewey-Humboldt, AZ

Dewey–Humboldt was incorporated on December 20, 2004, from the existing unincorporated towns of Dewey and Humboldt, located adjacent to one another in the Agua Fria River Valley, 15 miles east of Prescott. After discovery of gold on Lynx Creek in the spring of 1863, the Dewey area was settled around the summer 1863 by pioneer prospector, rancher and Native American Exterminator King Woolsey (1832–1879), who founded the Agua Fria Ranch, in what was then known as "Woolsey Valley," to supply the miners. Woolsey used stones from decimating prehistoric ruin to build his ranch house, built an irrigation system off the Agua Fria (probably part of a prehistoric system), and introduced some of the first cattle into newly organized Yavapai County (1864). At the "falls" of the Agua Fria at present Humboldt, Woolsey built a small quartz mill to work gold ores from the nearby hills and a small water-powered grist mill. During 1864, he led the storied Woolsey Expeditions to the east in retaliatory raids on Apache and in search of gold; all failed to find a new Eldorado.