Horses for Sale in Williamsfield IL, Kewanee IL

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Miniature Mare
nightingale is a sweet tempered filly. no vices and very nice with the ch..
Williamsfield, Illinois
Blue Roan
Miniature
Mare
-
Williamsfield, IL
IL
$350
Half Arabian Mare
Princess is a very sweet natured filly. we showed her in halter classes a..
Williamsfield, Illinois
Bay
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Williamsfield, IL
IL
$800
Other Mare
kid broke we a naberhood kid w / adhd and he rides her allover my 14 year..
Kewanee, Illinois
Other
Mare
-
Kewanee, IL
IL
$1,600
Quarter Horse Stallion
Blue Bars Honor is a Cowboy Mounted Shooting horse, bread for speed, will ..
Clinton, Iowa
Blue Roan
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Clinton, IA
IA
$7,500
Appaloosa Stallion
This is a great stallion who is easy to handle. He has been hand and pastu..
New Boston, Illinois
Chestnut
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
New Boston, IL
IL
$3,000
Paint Mare
Freckles has had 60 days on her and is a wonderful mare to be around. She ..
Clinton, Iowa
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Clinton, IA
IA
$2,500
Paint Mare
Very nice APHA Solid Paint Bred filly. Sire is big, tall Palomino Overo, ..
Kewanee, Illinois
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Kewanee, IL
IL
$500

About Milan, IL

The village is on the Rock River in northwest Illinois, about 4 miles upstream of its outlet to the Mississippi. The village is the site of the south campsites which comprised the Sauk and Fox village of Saukenuk, once the second-largest Native American inhabitation in North America. Originally platted along the right-of-way for the Hennepin Canal, in 1837, the village site was called in land speculation papers "Hampton" (not the town in Illinois, approximately 13 miles north-northeast, on the Mississippi River—see Hampton, Illinois for more). "Hampton's" land speculators, George Camden and Franklin Vandruff, sold land along the Rock River, along a north-west flowing creek, which was re-routed north into the Rock's main channel. Along Mill Creek, the industries of wool-carding and (river clamshell) "pearl" button-making helped rename the village by 1841 as Camden Mills.