Half Arabian Horses for Sale near Hermann, MO

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Half Arabian Mare
We raise high percent arabian foals from 50% to 99. 2% arabian. We have pa..
Steedman, Missouri
Buckskin
Half Arabian
Mare
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Steedman, MO
MO
Contact
Half Arabian Mare
I have several gorgeous buckskin, palomino, and palomino & white fillies a..
Steedman, Missouri
Palomino
Half Arabian
Mare
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Steedman, MO
MO
Contact
Half Arabian Stallion
"PONCHO" is 1 / 2 Arab. 1 / 2 Tenn Walker. 3 Y. O. Geld. 90 days training...
Bowling Green, Missouri
Pinto
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Bowling Green, MO
MO
$600
Half Arabian Stallion
Copper Bey is a registered arabian / quarter horse colt. Exoctic dished ar..
Mokane, Missouri
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Mokane, MO
MO
$500
Half Arabian Mare
This filly is a great little horse and is going to be big and fast. She al..
New Haven, Missouri
Bay
Half Arabian
Mare
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New Haven, MO
MO
$600
Half Arabian Stallion
This colt is a looker & certainly took on the Arabian characteristics with ..
Saint James, Missouri
Gray
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Saint James, MO
MO
$300
Half Arabian Stallion
Double registered IAHA & ICHR. Started with groundwork & has been saddled w..
Saint James, Missouri
Champagne
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Saint James, MO
MO
Contact
Half Arabian Stallion
Rare half arabian amber champagne colt, groundwork started & ready to train..
Saint James, Missouri
Champagne
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Saint James, MO
MO
$1,500
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About Hermann, MO

The city was founded by the Deutsche Ansiedlungs-Gesellschaft zu Philadelphia (German Settlement Society of Philadelphia) in 1837. It was promoted by Gottfried Duden, who wrote about the area in his Bericht über eine Reise nach den westlichen Staaten Nord Amerikas ( Report of a Journey to the Western States of Northern America). An early group of settlers were led by George Bayer and Edward Hermann, who bought the land and is considered by many [ who? ] to be the founder of the town. The town was platted after the society sold shares in the 11,300 acres (4,600 ha) of Gasconade River valley land it had purchased. The society had almost utopian goals of a "heart of German-America" where it could perpetuate traditional German culture and establish a self-supporting colony built around farming, commerce, and industry.