Missouri Fox Trotters for Sale near Litchfield Park, AZ

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Missouri Fox Trotter - Horse for Sale in Queen Creek, AZ 85142
Ranger
Ranger is a 9 yr old, red roan Missouri Fox Trotter. In great condition, up..
Queen Creek, Arizona
Red Roan
Missouri Fox Trotter
Gelding
10
Queen Creek, AZ
AZ
$6,500
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
Sundown is a 6 yr. old 15. 1H blue papered direct son of Southern Sunrise. ..
Glendale, Arizona
Palomino
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$300
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
King is a 6 yr. old 15. 1H blue papered Cremello stallion. He is a direct s..
Glendale, Arizona
Cremello
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$300
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
Jasmine is a 4 yr. old 15H blue papered bay roan mare, although I would hav..
Glendale, Arizona
Bay Roan
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$4,500
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
Apache is a 4 yr. old 15. 1H blue papered tri - colored gelding. He has a ..
Phoenix, Arizona
Tobiano
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Phoenix, AZ
AZ
$4,500
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
Apache is out of my finest black show mare and my tri - colored tobiano sta..
Glendale, Arizona
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$3,000
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
Apache is out of my finest black show mare and my tri - colored tobiano sta..
Glendale, Arizona
Tobiano
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$3,000
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
I am standing 5 stallions this year, a tri - colored tobiano that has never..
Glendale, Arizona
Tobiano
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Glendale, AZ
AZ
$300
1

About Litchfield Park, AZ

The town of Litchfield Park is a historically affluent community outside of Phoenix named after its founder, Paul Weeks Litchfield (1875–1959). He was an executive of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company who came to the Phoenix area in 1916 in search of suitable land to farm a long-staple cotton that had previously been available only from the Sea Islands off the coast of Georgia and from Egypt. This cotton was needed to strengthen the rubber in the pneumatic tire, of which Goodyear was the world's largest producer. The east coast cotton supply had been devastated by the boll weevil and the African supply had been greatly reduced by World War I attacks from German U-boats. Litchfield went to the Phoenix area at the suggestion of the United States Department of Agriculture, but he was not successful in motivating local farmers to grow his cotton.