Driving Horses for Sale near Des Plaines, IL

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Mule - Horse for Sale in Manhattan, IL 60442
Autumn
WWW.MAGICHORSE.COM Autumn is a gorgeous black Molly Mule that is well train..
Manhattan, Illinois
Black
Mule
Mare
8
Manhattan, IL
IL
Contact
Mule
14 yr old molly mule. Rides and drives. Drives single or double. Has great ..
Crete, Illinois
White
Mule
Mare
19
Crete, IL
IL
$4,000
Hackney Mare
Sereh lunges and is being ridden under saddle walk, trot, canter. She is j..
Burlington, Wisconsin
Bay
Hackney
Mare
-
Burlington, WI
WI
$2,200
Saddlebred Stallion
Don't miss out on this amazing horse versatile, can go english, driving, o..
New Lenox, Illinois
Chestnut
Saddlebred
Stallion
-
New Lenox, IL
IL
$5,000
Belgian Warmblood Stallion
Cyrus was born in May 2004. He is blonde in color and has a white stripe / ..
Dekalb, Illinois
Belgian Warmblood
Stallion
-
Dekalb, IL
IL
$3,000
Rocky Mountain Stallion
Majic is a beautiful refined black stallion by World Champion Chocolate Ven..
Harvard, Illinois
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Harvard, IL
IL
$450
Pony Stallion
Dakota is a welsh / quarter cross pony FOR LEASE. Do not pass this fantast..
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin
Palomino
Pony
Stallion
-
Lake Geneva, WI
WI
Contact
1

About Des Plaines, IL

Potawatomi, Ottawa, and Ojibwe ( Chippewa) Native American tribes inhabited the Des Plaines River Valley prior to Europeans' arrival. When French explorers and missionaries arrived in the 1600s in what was then the Illinois Country of New France, they named the waterway La Rivière des Plaines (English translation: "River of the Plane Tree") as they felt that trees on the river resembled the European plane trees. The first white settlers came from the eastern United States in 1833, after the Treaty of Chicago, followed by many German immigrants during the 1840s and '50s. In the 1850s, the land in this area was purchased by the Illinois and Wisconsin Land Company along a railroad line planned between Chicago and Janesville, Wisconsin. In 1852, the developers built a steam-powered mill next to the river to cut local trees into railroad ties.