Halter Horses for Sale near Salt Lake City, UT

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Arabian - Horse for Sale in Alpine, UT 84004
Arabian Mare
Offering WN Jaylo for your consideration! Out of Wayne Newton's breeding pr..
Alpine, Utah
Gray
Arabian
Mare
17
Alpine, UT
UT
$5,000
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Alpine, UT 84004
Arabian Mare
Offering WN Feather Design for your consideration! Out of Wayne Newton's br..
Alpine, Utah
Gray
Arabian
Mare
25
Alpine, UT
UT
$1,000
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Alpine, UT 84004
Arabian Mare
Offering WN Stars Angel for your consideration! Out of Wayne Newton's breed..
Alpine, Utah
Gray
Arabian
Mare
18
Alpine, UT
UT
$5,000
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Alpine, UT 84004
Arabian Stallion
Offering Justice Hope for your consideration! Out of Wayne Newton's breedin..
Alpine, Utah
Gray
Arabian
Stallion
9
Alpine, UT
UT
$6,500
Paint Mare
2006 Buckskin Paint Filly. This is a very nice filly. Sassy is halter and ..
West Haven, Utah
Paint
Mare
-
West Haven, UT
UT
$4,500
Arabian Stallion
RESERVE NATIONAL CHAMPION COUNTRY & TOP TENS in SHOW HACK. Impeccably train..
Salt Lake City, Utah
Chestnut
Arabian
Stallion
-
Salt Lake City, UT
UT
$9,000
Canadian Mare
Proven 5 out of 5 pasture breed and foaled. Gentle affectionate mare, halt..
Salt Lake City, Utah
Canadian
Mare
-
Salt Lake City, UT
UT
$700
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About Salt Lake City, UT

Before settlement by members of the LDS Church, the Shoshone, Ute, and Paiute had dwelt in the Salt Lake Valley for thousands of years. At the time of Salt Lake City's founding, the valley was within the territory of the Northwestern Shoshone; however, occupation was seasonal, near streams emptying from canyons into the Salt Lake Valley. One local Shoshone tribe, the Western Goshute tribe, referred to the Great Salt Lake as Pi'a-pa, meaning "big water", or Ti'tsa-pa, meaning "bad water". The land was treated by the United States as public domain; no aboriginal title by the Northwestern Shoshone was ever recognized by the United States or extinguished by treaty with the United States. The first American explorer in the Salt Lake area was probably Jim Bridger in 1825, although others had been in Utah earlier, some as far north as the nearby Utah Valley (the 1776 Dominguez-Escalante expedition were undoubtedly aware of Salt Lake Valley's existence).