Halter Horses for Sale near Hokah, MN

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Miniature Stallion
Will is a 2007 stud colt foaled May 5 th. He should mature about 32 -33", ..
Blair, Wisconsin
Miniature
Stallion
-
Blair, WI
WI
$500
Miniature Stallion
Stud colt foaled October 13, 2006. He is registered AMHR and WCMHR. He is ..
Blair, Wisconsin
Black
Miniature
Stallion
-
Blair, WI
WI
$500
Miniature Mare
2006 Black / white pinto filly foaled in Oct. , and will be weaned and rea..
Blair, Wisconsin
Black Overo
Miniature
Mare
-
Blair, WI
WI
$1,200
Paint Stallion
Tomahawk is a wonderful pinto, mostly white with bay / black head and large..
Holmen, Wisconsin
White
Paint
Stallion
-
Holmen, WI
WI
$450
Arabian Mare
Little Sandy is a beautiful palomino Arabian cross, standing 13 HH and 600 ..
Holmen, Wisconsin
Palomino
Arabian
Mare
-
Holmen, WI
WI
$375
Paint Stallion
Skippa Hopscotch (Andy) has been professionaly trained is still in training..
La Crosse, Wisconsin
Paint
Stallion
-
La Crosse, WI
WI
$3,900
Arabian Stallion
National caliber, PB Arabin hunt gelding, already qualified for Region 11 H..
Holmen, Wisconsin
Bay
Arabian
Stallion
-
Holmen, WI
WI
$9,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Secrets is a big, beautiful filly willing to please anyone. She has a littl..
Arcadia, Wisconsin
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Arcadia, WI
WI
$1,500
Morab Stallion
Justice is an EXCELLENT colt. He is a beautiful dark bay with a real zest. ..
Minneiska, Minnesota
Bay
Morab
Stallion
-
Minneiska, MN
MN
$500
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About Hokah, MN

Prior to the arrival of Europeans, the area that is now the city of Hokah was a Native American settlement of the Dakota people. The city's name, which is said to be a Native American word meaning gar fish or the Dakota name for the nearby Root River, derives from the chief of the settlement, Chief Wecheschatope Hokah. There were, at one time, more than thirty Indian mounds throughout the area including several effigy mounds, though most have been lost. The first recorded European settler in Hokah was Edward Thompson, who arrived in 1851 with his wife and family and constructed a flour mill and dam on Thompson Creek, a tributary of the Root River that runs through the city and now bears his name. The first town meeting was held in 1858, and the town was officially incorporated into a village by the state of Minnesota on March 2, 1871.