Mules for Sale near Radcliff, KY

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Mule - Horse for Sale in Louisville, KY 40501
Mavis
Everyone meet Mavis! Mavis is a 13 year old coal black very stocky gaited M..
Louisville, Kentucky
Black
Mule
Mare
15
Louisville, KY
KY
$3,500
Mule - Horse for Sale in Brandenburg, KY 40108
Molly and Millie
Pair of Horse Mules coming 2 in May Half Sisters out of a Walking Horse..
Brandenburg, Kentucky
Black
Mule
Mare
6
Brandenburg, KY
KY
$3,500
Mule Mare
very sweet mule, she isnt broke to anything yet, but she will be soon. she..
Sonora, Kentucky
Mule
Mare
-
Sonora, KY
KY
$500
Mule Stallion
They are full brothers, They are 8 and 9 years old. Pull the wagon or a pl..
Horse Branch, Kentucky
Bay
Mule
Stallion
-
Horse Branch, KY
KY
$3,000
Mule Mare
Jenny is a 13 year old chestnut molly mule. She has a fantastic temperament..
Irvington, Kentucky
Chestnut
Mule
Mare
-
Irvington, KY
KY
$3,000
Mule Mare
Mystic Morning Lady is a 4 year old Walkaloosa and has never been ridden, b..
Corydon, Indiana
Mule
Mare
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$1,500
Mule Mare
Murriah (Skips Color Me Walking) is a 6 year old Walkaloosa who stands bout..
Corydon, Indiana
White
Mule
Mare
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$1,500
Mule Mare
Mystic Morning Lady is a 4 year old Walkaloosa. She stands about 16 hands ..
Corydon, Indiana
Mule
Mare
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$1,000
Mule Mare
Murriah is a 6 year old Walkaloosa mare. She is about 16 hands and is soli..
Corydon, Indiana
White
Mule
Mare
-
Corydon, IN
IN
$1,000
1

About Radcliff, KY

Incorporated in 1956, Radcliff was first settled in 1919, when Horace McCullum subdivided lots along Wilson Avenue and sold them at auction to the highest bidder. McCullum named the new community after Major William Radcliffe, head of the Quartermaster Corps at the newly established Camp Henry Knox. After selling the general store he had opened in the new town, McCullum no longer played a role in its development. The next significant step in Radcliff's history took place during the 1930s when Fort Knox expanded and dislocated the towns of Stithton and New Stithton, causing various residents and businesses of those communities to move to Radcliff. During World War II, thousands of soldiers trained at Fort Knox and spent their leisure hours at the USO in Radcliff.