Half Arabian Horses for Sale near Mosinee, WI

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Half Arabian Stallion
This is a beautiful horse with full blaze and two white socks on the rear ..
Curtiss, Wisconsin
Sorrel
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Curtiss, WI
WI
$785
Half Arabian Stallion
Taz is beautiful 99. 8% arab bay tobiano 2 yr old colt would be excellent ..
Neillsville, Wisconsin
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Neillsville, WI
WI
$3,000
Half Arabian Mare
lovely 99. 8% arab dark bay and white tobiano filly with lot of type and a..
Neillsville, Wisconsin
Half Arabian
Mare
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Neillsville, WI
WI
$2,750
Half Arabian Stallion
Beautiful bay roan possibly turning grey. Arab - quarter cross but definite..
Withee, Wisconsin
Bay Roan
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Withee, WI
WI
$800
Half Arabian Stallion
SH Reo Bravo is a sweet, beautiful gelding that is going to be big. He shou..
Chili, Wisconsin
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Chili, WI
WI
$500
Half Arabian Stallion
Big, Beautiful, Chestnut Gelding 8 ~Year Old Quarter / Arab Cross Current w..
Athens, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Stallion
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Athens, WI
WI
$600
Half Arabian Stallion
Reo is a very friendly and beautiful pintabian breeding stock gelding. He l..
Chili, Wisconsin
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Chili, WI
WI
$500
Half Arabian Stallion
Registered Arabian / Saddlebred stallion for sale. Is very gentle. Would ..
Junction City, Wisconsin
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Junction City, WI
WI
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About Mosinee, WI

The traditional inhabitants of the area were the Ojibwe, the Potawatomi and the Menominee. However, the name is the Hochunk Mōsį́nį, the "Cold Country," from mō, an old form of mą, meaning "earth, ground, land, country"; and sį́nį, "cold." The Ojibwe ceded the territory to the United States in 1837 when they sold most of their land in what would become Wisconsin, though they were guaranteed the right to continue hunting, fishing, and gathering wild rice on the ceded lands. Similarly, the Potawatomi gave up their land claims in Wisconsin in 1833, and the Menominee ceded territory in this area in the 1836 Treaty of the Cedars. These treaties coincided with the establishment of the first sawmill in the area by a white settler, John L. Moore, in 1836, and enabled white settlement to begin in the area.