English Pleasure Horses for Sale near Port Washington, WI

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Plymouth, WI 53073
Goodn Plenty Karen
Good N Plenty Karen is an 11 year old sorrel quarter horse. She is well bui..
Plymouth, Wisconsin
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
17
Plymouth, WI
WI
$3,000
Mule Stallion
These horses have three good gaits with superb expressive canters! They ha..
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Black
Mule
Stallion
-
Milwaukee, WI
WI
$2,500
Arabian Stallion
Old Park / English Champion lines up close, no *Bask or HBB in his pedigre..
Whitewater, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Arabian
Stallion
-
Whitewater, WI
WI
$1,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Hancocks Derringer. Foundation and Hancock bred buckskin dun mare with zeb..
Muskego, Wisconsin
Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Muskego, WI
WI
$1,600
Morgan Mare
*PRICE REDUCED!!! QUICK SALE NEEDED!!! *Kylie Quin is my winter project. ..
Chilton, Wisconsin
Bay
Morgan
Mare
-
Chilton, WI
WI
$1,500
Thoroughbred Mare
Registered TB, Proven broodmare - easy breeder - took first time each time..
Kewaskum, Wisconsin
Gray
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Kewaskum, WI
WI
$1,900
Quarter Horse Stallion
Let this great willing to please show horse be yours. I am joining the ga..
Sussex, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Sussex, WI
WI
$5,000
1

About Port Washington, WI

The area that became Port Washington was originally inhabited by the Menominee, Potawatomi, and Sauk Native Americans. In 1679, the French explorers Louis Hennepin and René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle described stopped at the first landing north of the Milwaukee River to procure provisions at a Potawatomi village at the mouth of a small river, which may have been Sauk Creek, a stream that empties into the present-day Port Washington's artificial harbor. The 1830s saw the forced removal of Wisconsin's Native American population, followed by land speculation by merchants and investors. One of these land speculators was General Wooster Harrison, who purchased the land that would become Port Washington in 1835, which he originally named "Wisconsin City." Harrison's wife, Rhoda, died in 1837 and was the first white settler to be buried in the town. The settlement was abandoned that same year.