English Pleasure Horses for Sale in Miami FL, Lake Worth FL

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Paint Mare
3 yo well - trained filly for sale to excellent home only. sweet, willing..
Miami, Florida
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Miami, FL
FL
$5,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
Gelding Throughbred 5 years old. Great horse, has no vices. Has basic trai..
Miami, Florida
Brown
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Miami, FL
FL
$3,500
Appendix Mare
This mare is big, beautiful, and very sweet, she is wonderful on the ground..
Miami, Florida
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
Miami, FL
FL
$2,700
Thoroughbred Stallion
Red is a very friendly almost spook free TB. He was raced untill 5 and was ..
Miami, Florida
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Miami, FL
FL
$4,000
Thoroughbred Stallion
Tango is an all english horse he has been jumped, schooling 4 ft. and has a..
Lake Worth, Florida
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Lake Worth, FL
FL
$6,500
Appaloosa Mare
Windy has been to a few shows before. She can be ridden western or english...
Miami, Florida
Bay Roan
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Miami, FL
FL
$6,500
Appendix Mare
This mare goes right around the ring: W, T, C, gets the flying changes, sta..
Delray Beach, Florida
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
Delray Beach, FL
FL
$3,500

About Plantation, FL

Before the start of the twentieth century, the area that became Plantation was part of the Everglades wetlands, regularly covered by 2–3 feet of water. In 1855, Florida state passed the Internal Improvement Act and established the Internal Improvement Trust Fund, the trustees of which act as a government agency to oversee management, sale, and development of state land. In 1897, the Interior Department submitted 2.9 million acres to the Florida Land Office; however, the submission was revoked the following year, due to fears it would "impinge upon the rights and interests of the Seminole Tribes." The Seminole people regularly used the area for hunting, fishing and camping, and also used the nearby Pine Island Ridge as a headquarters during the second and third Seminole Wars. In 1899, Florida Governor William Sherman Jennings began an initiative to drain the Everglades. To establish Florida's entitlement to the land, Jennings obtained a new patent (known as the 'Everglades Patent') for land "aggregating 2,862,280 acres." Following his election in 1905, Jennings' successor, Napoleon Bonaparte Broward appointed Jennings as general counsel of the Internal Improvement Fund and continued the initiative for complete drainage of the Everglades (which was a core theme of his election campaign).