Half Arabian Horses for Sale near Council Bluffs, IA

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Half Arabian - Horse for Sale in Earling, IA 51530
Half Arabian Mare
Mariah has a great personality, loads and trailers well, leads in hand wel..
Earling, Iowa
Tobiano
Half Arabian
Mare
20
Earling, IA
IA
$2,000
Half Arabian Stallion
Azeem Sayad (HAHR #6A348215) (Nile Kharma X HS Azhahlla) This athletic, ..
Tekamah, Nebraska
Gray
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Tekamah, NE
NE
$4,000
Half Arabian Stallion
Double registered Half Arab Palomino Gelding. Big beautiful movement. Exce..
Mondamin, Iowa
Palomino
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Mondamin, IA
IA
$5,000
Half Arabian Stallion
Big beautiful mover. IAHA # 1A 340584. Quiet, easy going disposition. 60..
Mondamin, Iowa
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Mondamin, IA
IA
$4,000
Half Arabian Stallion
Beautiful palomino stud colt. Double registered. Should finish out between..
Mondamin, Iowa
Palomino
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Mondamin, IA
IA
$5,000
Half Arabian Mare
Sierra is out of a Bask bred mare and by a Paint stallion. She has a flaxen..
Blair, Nebraska
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Blair, NE
NE
$2,000
Half Arabian Mare
Black and white tobiano yearling filly. Beautiful, smart, 50 / 50 color. ..
Blair, Nebraska
Black
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Blair, NE
NE
$3,500
1

About Council Bluffs, IA

The first Council Bluff (singular) was on the Nebraska side of the river at Fort Atkinson (Nebraska), about 20 miles northwest of the current city of Council Bluffs. It was named by Lewis and Clark for a bluff where they met the Otoe tribe on August 2, 1804. The Iowa side of the river became an Indian Reservation in the 1830s for members of the Council of Three Fires of Chippewa, Ottawa and Potawatomi, who were forced to leave the Chicago area under the Treaty of Chicago, which cleared the way for the city of Chicago to incorporate. The largest group of Native Americans who moved to the area were the Pottawatomi, who were led by their chief Sauganash ("one who speaks English"), the son of the British loyalist William Caldwell, who founded Canadian communities on the south side of the Detroit River, and a Pottawatomi woman. Seeking to avoid confrontation with the Sioux, who were natives of the Council Bluffs area, the 1,000 to 2,000 Pottawattamie initially had settled east of the Missouri River in Indian territory between Leavenworth, Kansas and St.