Jumping Horses for Sale near Fennville, MI

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Pinto - Horse for Sale in Kalamazoo, MI 49419
Reba
⭐️ For Sale ⭐️ to amazing home only!!! Reba - Fancydontletmedown Registere..
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Red Roan
Pinto
Mare
11
Kalamazoo, MI
MI
$25,000
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Rockford, MI 49341
Thoroughbred Gelding
"Just Jack" 16.1 2012 lightly raced gelding. Correctly built with nice feet..
Rockford, Michigan
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Gelding
13
Rockford, MI
MI
$5,500
Trakehner - Horse for Sale in Paw Paw, MI 49079
Trakehner Gelding
Fusion is a 16.2 Bay registered Trakehner gelding. He has been shown in dre..
Paw Paw, Michigan
Bay
Trakehner
Gelding
20
Paw Paw, MI
MI
$17,000
Paint Pony - Horse for Sale in Benton Harbor, MI 49022-93
Freckles
Freckles is green broke to walk, trot, canter and back up. He needs work on..
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Bay
Paint Pony
Gelding
10
Benton Harbor, MI
MI
Sold
Friesian Mare
Double - Registered Friesian Sport Horse / Georgian Grande 3 yr old 16 HH ..
Plainwell, Michigan
Bay
Friesian
Mare
-
Plainwell, MI
MI
$7,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
Orion is a 19 year old, 16 hand, bay TB gelding. He's fairly mellow but f..
Holland, Michigan
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Holland, MI
MI
$750
Thoroughbred Stallion
Orion has been performing Training level Dressage movements and jumping 2-..
Holland, Michigan
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Holland, MI
MI
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About Fennville, MI

The "official" and widely accepted account of how the city came to be known as Fennville, is that an early white settler by the name of Elam Atwater Fenn built a saw mill in the immediate vicinity of the current community. This led to people referring to the settlement as "Fenn's Mill" which became the name associated with the post office there. Some early documents pluralized "Mill" to render "Fenn's Mills." The first road through what was to be Fennville was built by Harrison Hutchins and James McCormick in 1837. A fire (possibly related to the Great Chicago Fire or Great Michigan Fire) destroyed the village in October 1871. About that time, the paperwork (timetables and such) for the recently completed Chicago and Michigan Lake Shore Railroad arrived which identified the community's station as "Fennville." This was thought by some at the time (including Hutchins) to have been the result of clerical error.