Morgan Horses for Sale near Tampa, FL

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Morgan - Horse for Sale in Odessa, FL 33556
Morgan Mare
**SOLD** '05 Morgan mare Sire: Mainframe Dam: DSD Simply Radiant She is an..
Odessa, Florida
Bay
Morgan
Mare
19
Odessa, FL
FL
Sold
Morgan Mare
Quieara is all show horse! She wants to be a star! Well started in lines..
Myakka City, Florida
Bay
Morgan
Mare
-
Myakka City, FL
FL
$12,500
Morgan Mare
BCS Gone Wishing "lola" is a striking filly with a head and neck to die fo..
Myakka City, Florida
Bay
Morgan
Mare
-
Myakka City, FL
FL
$7,500
Morgan Mare
Arboria Chantelle is a one of a kind. Sweet as the day is long and the be..
Myakka City, Florida
Chestnut
Morgan
Mare
-
Myakka City, FL
FL
$7,500
Morgan Stallion
"Keene" is an outstanding saddleseat show horse that rides and drives. He ..
Myakka City, Florida
Bay
Morgan
Stallion
-
Myakka City, FL
FL
$5,000
Morgan Stallion
This horse can do it all. He drives, proven winner at walk / trot and is c..
Largo, Florida
Bay
Morgan
Stallion
-
Largo, FL
FL
$20,000
Morgan Mare
Cheyenne is a lovely mare with impecable manners and a very sweet dispositi..
Tampa, Florida
Morgan
Mare
-
Tampa, FL
FL
$4,000
Morgan Mare
"Stacey" is a gorgeous purebred morgan mare with world champion bloodlines...
Tarpon Springs, Florida
Liver Chestnut
Morgan
Mare
-
Tarpon Springs, FL
FL
$6,000
1

About Tampa, FL

When the pioneer community living near the US Army outpost of Fort Brooke was incorporated in 1849, it was called "Tampa Town", and the name was shortened to simply "Tampa" in 1855. The earliest instance of the name "Tampa", in the form "Tanpa", appears in the memoirs of Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda, who spent 17 years as a captive of the Calusa and traveled through much of peninsular Florida. He described Tanpa as an important Calusa town to the north of the Calusa domain, possibly under another chief. Archaeologist Jerald Milanich places the town of Tanpa at the mouth of Charlotte Harbor. The entrances to Tampa Bay and Charlotte Harbor are obscured by barrier islands, and their locations, and the names applied to them, were a source of confusion to explorers, surveyors and map-makers from the 16th century though the 18th century.