American Warmblood Horses for Sale near Harrodsburg, KY

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American Warmblood Stallion
Barbosa is a 4 year old 17 hh dark bay Dutch Warmblood x TB gelding with t..
Richmond, Kentucky
Bay
American Warmblood
Stallion
-
Richmond, KY
KY
$7,500
American Warmblood Mare
This filly is super quiet and friendly and should mature into a very large..
Lexington, Kentucky
Gray
American Warmblood
Mare
-
Lexington, KY
KY
$3,000
American Warmblood Stallion
Tucker is one of the most mature three year olds I have ever known. He was ..
Lexington, Kentucky
Bay
American Warmblood
Stallion
-
Lexington, KY
KY
$25,000
American Warmblood Mare
'Starlit' is a 6 y / o registered bay & white pinto american warmblood mar..
Danville, Kentucky
Pinto
American Warmblood
Mare
-
Danville, KY
KY
$4,000
American Warmblood Stallion
Because of age, we have decided to liquadate our stock. Our farm can be vi..
Winchester, Kentucky
Bay
American Warmblood
Stallion
-
Winchester, KY
KY
Contact
American Warmblood Stallion
Approved AWR (8. 1, 2 nd highest score of the year) and RPSI Book I (7. 8, ..
Lexington, Kentucky
Bay
American Warmblood
Stallion
-
Lexington, KY
KY
$1,000
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About Harrodsburg, KY

Harrodstown (sometimes Harrod's Town) was laid out and founded by James Harrod on June 16, 1774. Harrod led a company of adventurers totaling thirty-one men, beginning May 1774 in Pennsylvania, down the Monongahela and Ohio rivers in canoes and through a series of other rivers and creeks to the town's present-day location. Later that same year, amid Dunmore's War, Lord Dunmore dispatched two men to warn the surveyors of intimated Shawnee attacks, Daniel Boone and Michael Stoner, who are said to have completed the round trip of eight hundred miles in 64 days ; the settlement was abandoned as a result and resettled the following year by March. It was one of three settlements in present day Kentucky at the time the Thirteen Colonies declared independence in 1776, along with Logan's Fort and Boonesborough. Also known as Oldtown, Harrodstown was the first seat of Virginia's Kentucky (1776), Lincoln (1780), and Mercer (1785) counties upon their formations.