Lusitano Horses for Sale near Maywood, CA

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Lusitano Stallion
Kaganche is a strong, trained bullfighting horse with full of energy and h..
El Segundo, California
Black
Lusitano
Stallion
-
El Segundo, CA
CA
$48,000
Lusitano Stallion
Quiver is truly one of a kind. He's agile, strong, brave and with a great ..
Long Beach, California
Buckskin
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$1,800
Lusitano Stallion
Koncilador Del La Font is our beautiful black Lusitano Stallion imported f..
Long Beach, California
Black
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$1,500
Lusitano Stallion
Kaganche is imported from France and comes from the famous "Veiga" bloodli..
Long Beach, California
Black
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$42,000
Lusitano Stallion
Herd Reduction!!!Distinto will make a good Pleasure or Dressage horse. He ..
Long Beach, California
Gray
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$12,000
Lusitano Stallion
Bardo is a very fancy mover and very photogenic. He will make a good pleas..
Long Beach, California
Gray
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$12,000
Lusitano Stallion
Universo is going to make a good dressage horse. At just two years hold he..
Long Beach, California
Gray
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$14,000
Lusitano Stallion
Quiver is truly remarkable. He comes from the famous "Imperador" His unusu..
Long Beach, California
Buckskin
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$1,800
Lusitano Stallion
Kaganche is imported from France and comes from the famous "veiga" bloodli..
Long Beach, California
Black
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Long Beach, CA
CA
$42,000
Lusitano Stallion
Pilar is a grey lusitano stallion, 10 years old. He is very well behaved a..
Norco, California
Gray
Lusitano
Stallion
-
Norco, CA
CA
$15,000
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About Maywood, CA

The land on which Maywood now stands had been populated by Native American tribes for centuries. The area that would later become Maywood was deeded in 1781 by the Spanish monarchy to Spanish War veteran Manuel Nieto. When the settlement of Pueblo de Nuestra Senora de Los Angeles was recorded, it included the cow pasture (now Maywood) that eventually turned into a rancho. In 1919, May Wood, a popular young woman who worked for the real estate corporation developing the 2,300 acres (930 hectares) ranch into home tracts, agreed to lend her name to the property. The development of Maywood later survived a bitter challenge to dissolve the prospective city in early 1924.