Cutting Horses for Sale near Hope, IN

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Cambridge City, IN 47327
Diego
Storm’s Fearless Diego, A Gentle, Friendly, Yearling, Cremello Quarter Hors..
Cambridge City, Indiana
Cremello
Quarter Horse
Gelding
2
Cambridge City, IN
IN
Sold
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Fairland, IN 46126
Roper
Roper is a great horse. He has been under saddle for a year. Very willing ..
Fairland, Indiana
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Gelding
6
Fairland, IN
IN
$10,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Here is your chance to breed to a who's who of the cutting horse bloodline..
Edinburgh, Indiana
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Edinburgh, IN
IN
$350
Quarter Horse Stallion
This little horse has it all! He is approx. 14. 3 and an unusual "orange" ..
Dillsboro, Indiana
Red Dun
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Dillsboro, IN
IN
$8,500
Quarter Horse Mare
5 year old bay mare. Great cutting, reining, or cow horse prospect. Very a..
Dillsboro, Indiana
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Dillsboro, IN
IN
$2,850
Quarter Horse Stallion
Hickory is a 3 yr old stud that has an excellent set of papers to go with h..
Mooresville, Indiana
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Mooresville, IN
IN
$4,000
Paint Mare
Cissy is a sweet filly in need of a show home she will excel in reining or ..
Medora, Indiana
Paint
Mare
-
Medora, IN
IN
$1,000
1

About Hope, IN

The first settlement at Hope was made in 1830 by a colony of Moravians (people of the Protestant Moravian denomination) from Salem, North Carolina (now Winston-Salem), led by the Rev. Martin Hauser, after whom the town high school is named. Although a 1905 source claimed that the town was named for the optimistic spirit of its Moravian pioneer settlers, "Hope" is a common name for religious settlements, denoting hope in God's favor and the resurrection. The town was originally named Goshen, after the Biblical Goshen, but upon the establishment of a post office in 1834 the name was changed to Hope, as Indiana already had a town named Goshen. The town was founded to be a communal settlement like that of the two prominent Moravian settlements in the United States, Salem, North Carolina and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.