Halter Horses for Sale near Strawberry Plains, TN

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Donkey - Horse for Sale in Louisville, TN 37777
Big Sister
In search of a bred mini Jenny to be a “big sister” to our year old mini ge..
Louisville, Tennessee
Chocolate
Donkey
Mare
8
Louisville, TN
TN
Contact
Morab Mare
We have 4 horses one is a beautiful paint pony she is quarter / twh she is..
Lenoir City, Tennessee
Gray
Morab
Mare
-
Lenoir City, TN
TN
$4,000
Arabian Stallion
Beautiful chestnut / flaxen son of Farid Nile Moon and out of a Tammen dau..
Newport, Tennessee
Chestnut
Arabian
Stallion
-
Newport, TN
TN
$1,000
Arabian Stallion
Spartan (AHA pending, US Sweeps / Futurities Nom. ) ( FS Bengali (Kubinec)..
Greeneville, Tennessee
Gray
Arabian
Stallion
-
Greeneville, TN
TN
$3,500
Arabian Mare
EA Moniela Bey (AHA #519017, Sweepstakes Nom. ) (Blackstone Bey (Bey Shah) ..
Greeneville, Tennessee
Gray
Arabian
Mare
-
Greeneville, TN
TN
$5,000
Arabian Mare
Moniela El Dakar (AHA pending, US Sweeps / Futurities Nom. ) ( Dakar El Ja..
Greeneville, Tennessee
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Greeneville, TN
TN
$4,500
Arabian Stallion
out of The Minstril x Asafra. He's chestnut with a blaze and 4 white socks...
Tazewell, Tennessee
Chestnut
Arabian
Stallion
-
Tazewell, TN
TN
$800
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Registered beautiful black stallion. Not broke to ride. We have been trying..
Seymour, Tennessee
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Seymour, TN
TN
$600
Appaloosa Mare
9 y. o. Appaloosa mare, granddaughter of Appaloosa Hall of Fame stallion Go..
Kingston, Tennessee
Chestnut
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Kingston, TN
TN
$3,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
EB'S CHASSIE GIRL is a beautiful 3 yr old who loves people and dogs. She ha..
Knoxville, Tennessee
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Knoxville, TN
TN
$4,000
1

About Strawberry Plains, TN

Strawberry Plains is said to be named for the wild strawberries that grew there in abundance when white settlers from North Carolina first arrived in the area. According to a history of the community written by local high school students circa 1935, the name Straw Plains was a shorthand name used by railroad porters and flagmen on trains that passed through Strawberry Plains, and that came to be used as the name of the local railroad depot and on some local post office postmarks. Early in the Civil War, in 1861, the railroad bridge at Strawberry Plains was one target of Union sympathizers who aimed to burn several East Tennessee bridges to hinder Confederate military progress. The conspirators failed in their efforts to burn the Strawberry Plains bridge, but succeeded in their attacks of some of their other targets. Through much of the 20th century, Strawberry Plains was the site of a Tennessee limestone quarry and an underground zinc mine.