Driving Horses for Sale near Belle Meade, TN

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Woodbury, TN 37190
Jinks
Www.classichorseauction.com this hose is located in woodbury, tn *** start..
Woodbury, Tennessee
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
6
Woodbury, TN
TN
$5,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Lebanon, TN 37090
Cowboy
Barrel horse asking 3000 for or a nice horse trade he’s been In parades chu..
Lebanon, Tennessee
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Gelding
15
Lebanon, TN
TN
$3,000
Donkey - Horse for Sale in Shelbyville, TN
Donkey Mare
Ruby is a beautiful, well formed mammoth jennet with great head and ears, ..
Shelbyville, Tennessee
Red Roan
Donkey
Mare
-
Shelbyville, TN
TN
$1,200
Miniature Stallion
Mini for sale with all equipment. We are not interested in selling to a ho..
Christiana, Tennessee
Sorrel
Miniature
Stallion
-
Christiana, TN
TN
$1,300
Percheron Mare
Located in Central Tennessee. Solid black Percheron filly. Big, solid, cur..
Woodbury, Tennessee
Black
Percheron
Mare
-
Woodbury, TN
TN
$425
Belgian Warmblood Mare
Located in Central Tennessee. Solid black Percheron filly. Big, solid, cur..
Woodbury, Tennessee
Red Roan
Belgian Warmblood
Mare
-
Woodbury, TN
TN
$425
Draft Stallion
for stud this Tri colored stallion has prodused 50 percent color and well m..
Shelbyville, Tennessee
Draft
Stallion
-
Shelbyville, TN
TN
$350
Percheron Stallion
Good broke team. Will work with all farm machinery;safe for road use...
Shelbyville, Tennessee
Black
Percheron
Stallion
-
Shelbyville, TN
TN
$10,000
1

About Belle Meade, TN

The city of 3.1 square miles (8.0 km 2) takes its name from Belle Meade Plantation, which once encompassed 5,300 acres (2,100 ha). It was founded by planter John Harding and inherited at 1,200 acres by his son, William Giles Harding. Before the Civil War, the younger Harding more than doubled the property and built a new mansion, with the labor of the 136 slaves he owned. His descendants founded the Belle Meade Country Club here in 1901. Because of debt, the trustee of the Belle Meade Estate sold the mansion and 2,200 acres in May 1906 to Jacob McGavock Dickinson, the general counsel of the Illinois Central Railroad.