All-Around Horses for Sale near Bloomsdale, MO

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Arabian - Horse for Sale in Waterloo, IL 62298
OFW Lazo
Cutie pie alert! This adorable gelding is ready to make a splash in the spo..
Waterloo, Illinois
Bay
Arabian
Gelding
7
Waterloo, IL
IL
$10,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Bonne Terre, MO 63628
Sally
Ready for her new home- 16 year old registered quarter horse mare- don’t le..
Bonne Terre, Missouri
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
19
Bonne Terre, MO
MO
$4,700
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Oak Ridge, MO
Quarter Horse Stallion
This quiet, gentle guy is perfect for a youth or a beginner. He will go wh..
Oak Ridge, Missouri
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Oak Ridge, MO
MO
$2,500
Samantha Ellis
I am looking for a lesson safe horse. Budget 1500.00..
Cedar Hill, Missouri
Bay
Quarter Horse
Gelding
15
Cedar Hill, MO
MO
$1,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Struttin Forthe Gold was foaled February 5, 2000. He is 15. 1 hh. He is a ..
Oak Ridge, Missouri
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Oak Ridge, MO
MO
$5,500
Appaloosa Stallion
Personality, Color, Conformation, Ability, Size. . . the true all - around..
Okawville, Illinois
Champagne
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Okawville, IL
IL
$700
Paint Stallion
Dancer, Shawnee War Dance, is a gorgeous blue eyed gelding. he has a very c..
Imperial, Missouri
Paint
Stallion
-
Imperial, MO
MO
$2,250
Paint Stallion
Dice is a very sweet and pretty black and white paint colt, he is almost 6 ..
Pacific, Missouri
Black Overo
Paint
Stallion
-
Pacific, MO
MO
$500
Paint Mare
Cotton Top Annie - -2 year old - - super flashy with white forelock and one..
Doe Run, Missouri
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Doe Run, MO
MO
$1,000
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About Bloomsdale, MO

Bloomsdale was known as early as 1839 as "La Fourche à Duclos", meaning "the fork of Duclos" and named for the creek by the same name. Its parish priest, a Father Blume, wished his parishioners to all reside on one side of the stream, and so bought land for a settlement on what is now called Establishment Creek moved to the present site of Bloomsdale. One account has it that "Blumesdale" was mailed to Washington, DC, as the name of the town's post office. But the name was illegible, so the story goes, so Washington called the office Bloomsdale. More likely, Washington anglicized the German name Blume ("flower") to Bloom.