Black Gaited Horses for Sale near Cincinnati, OH

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Tennessee Walking Mare
Ebony is UTD on worming and shots. No health or lambness problems, easy k..
Middletown, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Middletown, OH
OH
$2,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
This is the horse you have been waiting for. Dead broke but not a deadhead..
Middletown, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Middletown, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Ebony is a true black TWH purebred mare (papers were lost) . Great trail h..
Middletown, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Middletown, OH
OH
$2,000
Paso Fino Stallion
lines include ResorteIII, Contrapunto, Hilachas, Plumaje. Very friendly, im..
Camden, Ohio
Black
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Camden, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
this 15 mo. colt has had all the ground work done. i have owned him since h..
Oakwood, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Oakwood, OH
OH
$1,800
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About Cincinnati, OH

Cincinnati began in 1788 when Mathias Denman, Colonel Robert Patterson, and Israel Ludlow landed at a spot at the northern bank of the Ohio opposite the mouth of the Licking and decided to settle there. The original surveyor, John Filson, named it "Losantiville". In 1790, Arthur St. Clair, the governor of the Northwest Territory, changed the name of the settlement to "Cincinnati" in honor of the Society of the Cincinnati, made up of Revolutionary War veterans, of which he was a member; which was in turn named for Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus, a dictator in the early Roman Republic who saved Rome from a crisis, and then retired to farming because he did not want to remain in power. The introduction of steamboats on the Ohio River in 1811 opened up the city's trade to more rapid shipping, and the city established commercial ties with St.