Cutting Horses for Sale near Cheraw, SC

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Appaloosa Stallion
Bloodlines: Pleasant Dreams, 7X ApHC World Champion, 5 Bronze Medallions a..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Bay
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$650
Appaloosa Stallion
Sire: Pleasant Dreams, 7x World Champion (Dreamfinder, ApHC HOF) x Ms Pepp..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Black Overo
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$650
Appaloosa Mare
Super Nice Refined Looking Filly. She loves to run!!!! AWESOME Pedigree: ..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Bay
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$1,500
Appaloosa Stallion
Rocket Man is a light champaine colored dun, he almost looks palamino, perf..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$6,000
Appaloosa Stallion
An Apsolute Dream has 9 ApHC and NCHA Hall of Fame and 10 World Champion si..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Black Overo
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$400
Appaloosa Mare
Beautiful Dark Bay / Snowcap to withers. She can be registered 73% Foundat..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$2,500
Appaloosa Stallion
He's one of a kind! Simply Beautiful! HUGE! A Solid, very rich Dunskin, tw..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$1,800
Appaloosa Stallion
You can't get any better than this fellow! Wow! Cutting Bred. Picture taken..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Red Dun
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$6,000
Appaloosa Stallion
Beautiful Lineback red dun / w extreme factors: Tiger Barring, leg stripes ..
Lumber Bridge, North Carolina
Dun
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Lumber Bridge, NC
NC
$1,200
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About Cheraw, SC

When the first Europeans arrived in the area it was inhabited by the Cheraw and Pee Dee American Indian tribes. The Cheraw lived near the waterfall hill, near present-day Cheraw, but by the 1730s they had been devastated by new infectious disease inadvertently carried by the European traders. Survivors joined the Catawba Confederacy for safety and left their name in history. Only a few scattered Cheraw families remained by the time of the American Revolution. A few European settlers entered their territory in the 1730s, forced upriver when the Welsh came to claim the Welsh Baptist lands granted by the English government in the area around Society Hill.