Halter Horses for Sale in Corydon IN, Bardstown KY

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Quarter Horse Stallion
"Billy Bravo" will be up for his first breeding season this coming summer. ..
Corydon, Indiana
Dun
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$300
Paint Mare
7 month old, sweet pinto pony. Have halter broke and round pen driven. Ver..
Bardstown, Kentucky
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Bardstown, KY
KY
$1,500
Paint Mare
Jag is one of a kind she has a blk tobino sire an a grey grand daughter of ..
Medora, Indiana
Paint
Mare
-
Medora, IN
IN
$500
Paint Stallion
paul has only produced duns, blacks and bays. possibly homozygous for the b..
Bloomfield, Kentucky
Paint
Stallion
-
Bloomfield, KY
KY
$3,500
Paint Stallion
This is a great stallion, very beautiful, wonderful muscle. Has been trail ..
Springfield, Kentucky
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Springfield, KY
KY
$6,800
Miniature Stallion
This awesome gelding is sired by AMHA Futurity leader - Sids Husker. His n..
Frankfort, Kentucky
Miniature
Stallion
-
Frankfort, KY
KY
$1,600
Paint Stallion
C The Windwalker has produced overo, tovero, tobiano an sabino foals. most ..
Medora, Indiana
Paint
Stallion
-
Medora, IN
IN
$350
Miniature Stallion
SilverWind Blazin Sun will be an asset to someone's show string and breedin..
Corydon, Indiana
Sorrel
Miniature
Stallion
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$3,000
Miniature Stallion
Warrior is a look - alike King Supreme grandson with a 4-6 generation pedig..
Corydon, Indiana
Bay
Miniature
Stallion
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$3,000
2

About Indian Hills, KY

The community is named for local settler John Veech's Indian Hill Stock Farm, for a time one of the largest horse farms in Kentucky. Veech held over 300 acres (120 ha) as early as 1805, and his family continued to own most of the local land into the 20th century. The Georgian-style Veech house still stands at 125 Indian Hills Trail; the farm's springhouse is at 119 Arrowhead Road. (Both have been approved for listing on the National Register of Historic Places, but the property owners have so far opted against listing. ) An 1877 Louisville Courier-Journal article claims the name was adopted from the hundreds of Indians camped at the site at the time of Louisville's founding in 1778, but naming developments after Indians was generally fashionable in the late-19th century.