Dressage Horses for Sale near Morton Grove, IL

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Welsh Pony - Horse for Sale in Beecher, IL 60401
Lease
Looking for a lease for the next year or so… Preference: Age: 7-18 Height:..
Beecher, Illinois
Bay
Welsh Pony
Mare
2
Beecher, IL
IL
$123
Lusitano - Horse for Sale in Chicago, IL 60510
Jada
Looking for a Working Equitation or dressage partner in a smaller package? ..
Chicago, Illinois
Buckskin
Lusitano
Mare
11
Chicago, IL
IL
$14,000
Friesian - Horse for Sale in Wadsworth, IL 60083
Friesian Gelding
Feite made it to the third round of the Stallion Show in the Netherlands an..
Wadsworth, Illinois
Black
Friesian
Gelding
24
Wadsworth, IL
IL
$23,000
Friesian - Horse for Sale in Wadsworth, IL 60083
Friesian Gelding
Feite made it to the third round of the Stallion Show in the Netherlands an..
Wadsworth, Illinois
Black
Friesian
Gelding
24
Wadsworth, IL
IL
$23,000
OTB Mare
OTB mare for sale started dressage but shows potential for jumping. Very sw..
Trever, Wisconsin
Gray
Thoroughbred
Mare
14
Trever, WI
WI
$5,000
Thoroughbred Stallion
90 day profess. training. Born & Raised on Property - lots of hands on - h..
Wayne, Illinois
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Wayne, IL
IL
$5,800
Quarter Horse Stallion
At his first show (with a first - time dressage rider) , Petey won first p..
Morton Grove, Illinois
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Morton Grove, IL
IL
$15,000

About Morton Grove, IL

A handful of farmers from England settled in 1830-1832, despite there being no roads from Chicago, only native American trails, as the defeat of the Black Hawk War and the Treaty of Chicago led Native Americans to leave the areas. Farmers Germany and Luxembourg started arriving by the end of the decade, clearing the land by cutting the walnut, oak, hickory, elm and maple trees. Logs were initially hauled to a sawmill at Dutchman's Point (later Niles, Illinois) at the corner of what would become Milwaukee, Waukegan and Touhy Avenues, and stumps burned for charcoal that could then be hauled to heat homes in expanding Chicago. Immigrant John Miller erected a water-powered sawmill near where the Chicago River met the future Dempster Street shortly after 1841. This simplified homebuilding in the area, as well as facilitated further lumber sales.