Breeding Horses for Sale near Oswego, KS

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Quarter Horse Mare
This mare is an excellent broodmare. She has had several colts with excel..
Chelsea, Oklahoma
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Chelsea, OK
OK
$300
Paint Mare
World Champion Halter / Loungeline Bay Tobiano Mare. Double registered APH..
Coffeyville, Kansas
Paint
Mare
-
Coffeyville, KS
KS
$10,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Beautiful bay mare, rides and drives and has great foals. Price includes dr..
Quapaw, Oklahoma
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Quapaw, OK
OK
$2,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Beautiful Dappled Gray brood mare. Very quiet in nature. Stands quietly fo..
Columbus, Kansas
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Columbus, KS
KS
$3,200
Paint Mare
Foundation bred big bodied broodmare, paint broodstock. Quiet, gentle, easy..
Quapaw, Oklahoma
Brown
Paint
Mare
-
Quapaw, OK
OK
$2,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Foundation bred, big bodied great looking broodmare. She was trained, but ..
Quapaw, Oklahoma
Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Quapaw, OK
OK
$3,000
Thoroughbred Mare
ha you will never find a better dispostition stake placed made 25k she had ..
Miami, Oklahoma
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Miami, OK
OK
$6,500
Paint Stallion
Turbo is a real nice homozygous bay tobiano, he will only produce tobiano f..
Fairland, Oklahoma
Paint
Stallion
-
Fairland, OK
OK
$2,750
Paint Stallion
Badger is a nice foundation bred Tobiano colt that will only produce Palomi..
Fairland, Oklahoma
Cremello
Paint
Stallion
-
Fairland, OK
OK
$6,500
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About Oswego, KS

Oswego is located on the site of an Osage village called No tse Wa spe, which means "Heart Stays" or more loosely translated, "Quiet Heart." Jesuit Missionaries from Osage Mission (now St. Paul, Kansas) who worked among the Osages called the village "Little Town," probably because the band of Osages who lived in the village were of the "Little Osage" division of the Osage People. More specifically, the Osage Village of Little Town was described as "Little Town Above" by the Jesuits, to distinguish it from another village, which was sometimes located just to the east of Little Town, called "Little Town Below." While Osage villages were moved quite often (according to weather, hunting conditions, and sanitary conditions) Little Town Above was generally located on the bluff overlooking the Neosho River, where Oswego sits today. Little Town Below often sat near Horseshoe Lake, in the Neosho River Valley about a mile due east of Oswego. During the 1850s, Little Town was often referred to as "White Hair's Town," in honor of a resident of the village named Iron Hawk.