Black Overo Horses for Sale near Henderson, KY

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Tennessee Walking Mare
I have lower her price so that she can find a home with someone who has th..
White Plains, Kentucky
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
White Plains, KY
KY
$850
Tennessee Walking Mare
Nadia is a unregistered TWH mare. She is 16 hands and naturally gaited. Sh..
White Plains, Kentucky
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
White Plains, KY
KY
$1,300
Paint Stallion
APHA bay and white overo standing at stud. proven producer of color, confo..
Rockport, Indiana
Black Overo
Paint
Stallion
-
Rockport, IN
IN
$400
Appaloosa Mare
This filly is a beautiful girl. Mom is a registered Appalossa, dad is a b..
Central City, Kentucky
Black Overo
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Central City, KY
KY
$800
Tennessee Walking Stallion
He will load and lead but he has never had any training what so ever. Exce..
Central City, Kentucky
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Central City, KY
KY
$2,500
Paint Mare
Hope U Have Cash is in foal for a May foal, she is bred by a 15. 3 hand Blk..
Petersburg, Indiana
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Petersburg, IN
IN
$1,100
Paint Mare
Black / white tobiano mare, tested positive homozygous gene, owner maybe wi..
Waverly, Kentucky
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Waverly, KY
KY
$10,000
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About Henderson, KY

Henderson has its roots in a small, block-wide strip of land high above the Ohio River, the site of the present-day Audubon Mill Park directly south of the city's riverfront boat dock. A village on this site was called "Red Banks" because of the reddish clay soil of the bluffs overlooking the Ohio River. The future city was named after Richard Henderson, an eighteenth-century pioneer and land speculator, by his associates Samuel Hopkins and Thomas Allin. Henderson County also shares this namesake. On March 17, 1775, North Carolina judge Richard Henderson and his Transylvania Company had met with 1,200 Cherokee in a council at Sycamore Shoals (present-day Elizabethton, Tennessee) to purchase over 17,000,000 acres (69,000 km 2) of land between the Ohio, Cumberland, and Kentucky rivers in present-day Kentucky and Tennessee to resell it to white settlers.