Horses for Sale in Clarkesville GA, Danielsville GA

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Quarter Horse Stallion
Great horse. Anyone can ride. Western Pleasure prospect. Selling due to a ..
Clarkesville, Georgia
Gray
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Clarkesville, GA
GA
$800
Paint Mare
Beautiful registered Breeding Stock Paint. Dixie is a sorrel yearling with..
Danielsville, Georgia
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Danielsville, GA
GA
$500
Quarter Horse Mare
Childsafe, well - mannered mare. Beautiful mover! Good bloodlines includi..
Anderson, South Carolina
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Anderson, SC
SC
$2,700
Hanoverian Stallion
"Denny" is a beautiful bay yearling colt by Rubaron Von Foxpaw and out of ..
Commerce, Georgia
Bay
Hanoverian
Stallion
-
Commerce, GA
GA
$15,000
Pony Mare
Pretty paint pony. Brown and white. . . . used for pleasure riding. Great..
Pelzer, South Carolina
Other
Pony
Mare
-
Pelzer, SC
SC
$1,350
Quarter Horse Stallion
Gorgeous head, big cheek, large eyes, cute ears, VERY expressive. Good for..
Athens, Georgia
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Athens, GA
GA
$700
Appendix Stallion
Smokey is a very stocky, easy keeper. I can let my friends three year old ..
Athens, Georgia
Gray
Appendix
Stallion
-
Athens, GA
GA
$1,000

About Toccoa, GA

Native Americans, including the Mississippian culture mound builders and later the Cherokee, were the original inhabitants in what is now Toccoa and the surrounding area. "Saturday the 25th day of September 1725. About four of the Clock in the Afternoon came in the Warr hoop from Ouconey with a peice of a Scalp of one of the Enemies Scouts, giving an Accot that Scouts being in Number Twenty four that went out from old Estotoe, and Toxsoah having come upon the tracts of three of the Enemy found they were made downwards towards the other Towns (on wch) they Concluded to waylay the Path thinking by that means to Catch the Enemy being three in Number returning back to their old tracts near Estotoe from Town to Town." George Chicken, Journal (quoted in Travels in the American Colonies ) Indian agent Col. George Chicken was one of the first people to mention Toccoa in his journal from 1725. The first residents of European descent were a small number of American Revolutionary War veterans led by Col.