Half Arabian Horses for Sale near Kittrell, NC

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Half Arabian Stallion
This horse was born to jump! "Slim" is a stunning 16 hand bay Arabian cros..
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Chapel Hill, NC
NC
$5,000
Half Arabian Stallion
Rob would make an excellent kids horse. Rob is for lease ONLY! He has bee..
Garner, North Carolina
Sorrel
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Garner, NC
NC
$60
Half Arabian Stallion
LEVI: 7 yo 14. 2 hh paint / Arabian gelding. Loves to jump - fun & forwar..
Pittsboro, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Pittsboro, NC
NC
$5,000
Half Arabian Stallion
fancy blue eyed cremello gelding. handled since birth. stands for farrier..
Zebulon, North Carolina
Cremello
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Zebulon, NC
NC
$2,000
Half Arabian Mare
Grade Mare. Nice, full bodied with kind personality. Will jump 2'+, Nice f..
Wendell, North Carolina
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Wendell, NC
NC
$3,200
Half Arabian Mare
3 / 4 Arab - Aladdinn, Kaset direct bloodlines. 1 / 4 SB - - Easter Symbol ..
Raleigh, North Carolina
Black
Half Arabian
Mare
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Raleigh, NC
NC
Contact
Half Arabian Mare
RF Rosalita de Gomez is a very elegant 15. 1h, 4 year old, chestnut 1 / 2 A..
Durham, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Durham, NC
NC
$3,500
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About Kittrell, NC

Kittrell was chartered in 1885, with its first mayor David Outlaw, a merchant and bachelor. In 1860, one census district in Granville County the primary of the three parent counties (73% of the land area of Vance County was taken from Granville County) of Vance County, was called Kittrell's Depot. Kittrell's Depot was a railroad depot named for George Kittrell and his wife, Elizabeth Boswell Kittrell, who donated the land for a Raleigh and Gaston Railroad station. The first post office for the Kittrell area, with Elisha Overton as its first postmaster, was established in 1854, replacing one in neighboring Stanton in the Epping Forest area which lacked direct railroad access, this establishment occurring shortly after Kittrell's Depot became operational. An 1868 state law required county governments to divide counties into smaller units of townships.