Brown Horses for Sale near Casa Grande, AZ

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Maricopa, AZ 85138
Cisco
Sweet gelding. Used mostly on trails but can go any direction. Stands great..
Maricopa, Arizona
Brown
Quarter Horse
Gelding
12
Maricopa, AZ
AZ
$5,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Mesa, AZ 85212
Quarter Horse Mare
ETTA is a 10 y/o 1D barrel horse and would make a phenomenal high school or..
Mesa, Arizona
Brown
Quarter Horse
Mare
18
Mesa, AZ
AZ
$14,000
Thoroughbred Mare
2007 Daughter of Unbridled vision in foal the stakes winner The Hunk son of..
Gilbert, Arizona
Brown
Thoroughbred
Mare
16
Gilbert, AZ
AZ
$4,500
Thoroughbred Mare
2007 Daughter of Unbridled vision in foal the stakes winner The Hunk son of..
Gilbert, Arizona
Brown
Thoroughbred
Mare
16
Gilbert, AZ
AZ
$4,500
Thoroughbred Mare
2007 Daughter of Unbridled vision in foal the stakes winner The Hunk son of..
Gilbert, Arizona
Brown
Thoroughbred
Mare
16
Gilbert, AZ
AZ
$4,500
Half Arabian Mare
SALE PENDING PRICE REDUCED $1, 000 OBO MAKE AN OFFER! MUST SELL ASAP Lill..
Queen Creek, Arizona
Brown
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Queen Creek, AZ
AZ
$1,000
Paint Stallion
Sired by Night Lark (APHA heading point earner & sire of APHA World Champio..
Gilbert, Arizona
Brown
Paint
Stallion
-
Gilbert, AZ
AZ
$350
Paint Stallion
Sired by Night Lark (APHA heading point earner and sire of APHA World Champ..
Gilbert, Arizona
Brown
Paint
Stallion
-
Gilbert, AZ
AZ
$450
Quarter Horse Stallion
Ike is a beautiful AQHA gelding. He has been ridden along the roadside, tra..
Tolleson, Arizona
Brown
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Tolleson, AZ
AZ
$3,000
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About Casa Grande, AZ

Casa Grande was founded in 1879 by The Carter Family during the Arizona mining boom, specifically due to the presence of the Southern Pacific Railroad. In January 1880, the community of Terminus, meaning "end-of-the-line," was established despite consisting of just five residents and three buildings. In September 1880, railroad executives renamed the settlement Casa Grande, after the Hohokam ruins at the nearby Casa Grande Ruins National Monument. Casa Grande grew slowly, and suffered several setbacks both in 1886 and 1893, when fires ravaged the town, destroying all wooden housing structures within it. When the mining boom slowed in the 1890s, the town was nearly abandoned, but with the advent of agriculture, the town remained alive and well, and was eventually incorporated in 1915.