Jumping Horses for Sale in Chino CA, Moorpark CA

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Quarter Horse Stallion
My Socks Are Holy - Super Cute 8 yr, 15. 2 hd, Chestnut with chrome. Incen..
Chino, California
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Chino, CA
CA
$5,000
Holsteiner Stallion
Mr Smith: Amazing 12 yr, 17 hd Holsteiner Gelding! He has gone from Green..
Chino, California
Chestnut
Holsteiner
Stallion
-
Chino, CA
CA
$20,000
Hanoverian Stallion
Ferdinan: 1993 BIG 17 hd, Papered, Hanoverian Gelding. Chestnut with 4 wh..
Chino, California
Chestnut
Hanoverian
Stallion
-
Chino, CA
CA
$3,900
Thoroughbred Mare
Chenade - Cute WB type 10 yr, 16. 1 Hd Irish Tb Mare. Excellent EQ / Hunte..
Chino, California
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Chino, CA
CA
$10,000
Thoroughbred Mare
Very beautiful 15 H 4 yr thoroughbred mare. Very friendly and loves to wor..
Moorpark, California
Thoroughbred
Mare
-
Moorpark, CA
CA
$4,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
Good looking 16H 6 yr thoroughbred gelding. Pretty mover. Has done trails ..
Agoura Hills, California
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Agoura Hills, CA
CA
Contact
Hanoverian Stallion
Incredibly talented and shown the past seven years in Adult Amatuer Jumper..
Moorpark, California
Gray
Hanoverian
Stallion
-
Moorpark, CA
CA
$55,000

About Huntington Park, CA

Named for prominent industrialist Henry E. Huntington, Huntington Park was incorporated in 1906 as a streetcar suburb on the Los Angeles Railway for workers in the rapidly expanding industries to the southeast of downtown Los Angeles. To this day, about 30% of its residents work at factories in nearby Vernon and Commerce. The stretch of Pacific Boulevard in downtown Huntington Park was a major commercial district serving the city's largely working-class residents, as well as those of neighboring cities such as Bell, Cudahy, South Gate, and Downey. As with most of the other cities along the corridor stretching along the Los Angeles River to the south and southeast of downtown Los Angeles, Huntington Park was an almost exclusively white community during most of its history; Alameda Street and Slauson Avenue, which were fiercely defended segregation lines in the 1950s, separated it from black areas.