Breeding Horses for Sale in Franklin KY, Bonnieville KY

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Tennessee Walking Mare
This mare is easy to handle and easy to breed. Great Dam. Had stud colt Se..
Franklin, Kentucky
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Franklin, KY
KY
$3,000
Paint Stallion
Wonderfull temperment, loves attention and easy to handle, would make a goo..
Bonnieville, Kentucky
Paint
Stallion
-
Bonnieville, KY
KY
$750
Rocky Mountain Mare
Chocolate mare w / flax m / t. Star, snip 2 coronets. In foal to Tex's Prid..
Owensboro, Kentucky
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Owensboro, KY
KY
$3,000
Arabian Stallion
WV Ali Pasha is a straight Egyptian, Al Khamsa, Asil, Blue List elg. classi..
Portland, Tennessee
White
Arabian
Stallion
-
Portland, TN
TN
$650
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Super stallion. Easy to handle during breeding or trail riding. Appears da..
Madisonville, Kentucky
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Madisonville, KY
KY
$4,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Senator in Dixie is a Beautiful mare bred to Stonecutter. She is big and sh..
Bowling Green, Kentucky
Blue Roan
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bowling Green, KY
KY
$7,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
She's Masquerading, is a excellent mare. She is bred to Kodak's Cream Chanc..
Bowling Green, Kentucky
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bowling Green, KY
KY
$5,000
Miniature Mare
We have several bred AMHR Appaloosa mares for sale. Reducing Herd. All have..
Central City, Kentucky
Miniature
Mare
-
Central City, KY
KY
$1,500
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About Morgantown, KY

The settlement may have originally been called Funkhouser Hill after Christopher Funkhouser, the local landowner who donated 60 acres (24 ha) of land to establish a seat for the newly formed Butler County in 1811. The etymology of the city's present name (originally written Morgan Town) is uncertain. It may have been chosen to honor a hunter named Morgan or to honor Daniel Morgan Smith, the first white child born in the town. It was incorporated as Morgantown by the state assembly in 1813, although the post office also went by the name Butler Court House during the 19th century. Granville Allen, a member of the 17th Kentucky Infantry, was one of the first Union soldiers to die in the Civil War, in a skirmish on October 29, 1861.