Appendix Horses for Sale near Kokomo, IN

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Appendix - Horse for Sale in Marion, IN 46952
Appendix Mare
Victoria is a 2016 red dun appendix filly. She is AQHA Appendix registered..
Marion, Indiana
Red Dun
Appendix
Mare
8
Marion, IN
IN
$6,500
Appendix Mare
Lucky, is a great prospect for a show / competition horse. She is a fancy ..
West Lafayette, Indiana
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
West Lafayette, IN
IN
$500
Appendix Mare
Currently showing and ready for more. . . . Sadie is a great horse for wes..
Indianapolis, Indiana
Chestnut
Appendix
Mare
-
Indianapolis, IN
IN
$4,000
Appendix Stallion
4 yr. old, 16. 2H sorrel gelding. Excellent Bloodlines! Goes back to Easy J..
Peru, Indiana
Sorrel
Appendix
Stallion
-
Peru, IN
IN
$2,000
Appendix Mare
Nice Filly bred W / Racing, Cutting, pleasure. Should Mature To 15-1. Nice ..
Albany, Indiana
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
Albany, IN
IN
$1,200
1

About Kokomo, IN

The following is a list of all the buildings in Kokomo, Indiana, that are listed in the National Register of Historic Places: Elwood Haynes House Kokomo City Building Kokomo Country Club Golf Course Kokomo Courthouse Square Historic District Kokomo High School and Memorial Gymnasium Lake Erie and Western Depot Historic District Learner Building Old Silk Stocking Historic District Seiberling Mansion The settler tradition says Kokomo was named for Kokomoko or Ma-Ko-Ko-Mo (meaning "black walnut"), shortened to Kokomo, said to have been one of the four sons of Chief Richardville last of the chiefs of the Miami people. Folklore holds that he was 7 feet (2.1 m) tall and falsely gives him the title of "chief." David Foster, known as the "Father of Kokomo," claimed that he named the town Kokomo after the "ornriest Indian on earth" because Kokomo was "the ornriest town on earth." Kokomo is thought to have been born in 1775 and died in 1838. The only documentary proof of his existence is a trading post record of a purchase of a barrel of flour for $12 for his "squaw." His remains (with those of others) were reportedly discovered during the construction of a saw mill in 1848 and re-interred in the "north-east corner" of the Pioneer Cemetery. The tradition of the Peru Miami is that the town was named after a Thorntown Miami named Ko-kah-mah, whose name is rendered Co-come-wah in the Treaty at the Forks of the Wabash in 1834. That name was translated as "the diver" (an animal that could swim under water).