Horses for Sale in Sparta KY, Harrison OH

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Tennessee Walking Mare
Beautiful sorrel mare with white blaze and hind socks. Also have sister. ..
Sparta, Kentucky
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Sparta, KY
KY
$1,500
Rocky Mountain Stallion
3- month colt. Chocolate / white mane & tail. White Blaze. Sire: Ashcraft..
Harrison, Ohio
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Harrison, OH
OH
$2,000
Rocky Mountain Mare
4- month filly. Chocolate / white mane and tail. White narrow diagonal st..
Harrison, Ohio
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Harrison, OH
OH
$2,000
Rocky Mountain Stallion
7- month old colt. Chocolate / white mane & tail. White oval star, discon..
Harrison, Ohio
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Harrison, OH
OH
$2,500
Andalusian Stallion
Kaifan, outstanding quality, ability and bone, passing on his lovely temper..
New Richmond, Ohio
Gray
Andalusian
Stallion
-
New Richmond, OH
OH
$800
Thoroughbred Stallion
clifford has experience in novice level eventing and he has the potential t..
Harrison, Ohio
Chestnut
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Harrison, OH
OH
$6,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
this 15 mo. colt has had all the ground work done. i have owned him since h..
Oakwood, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Oakwood, OH
OH
$1,800

About The Village of Indian Hill, OH

The Village of Indian Hill began as a farming community, which from about 1904 began to attract Cincinnatians, who bought up its farmhouses as rural weekend destinations. They reached Indian Hill on the Swing Line, a train running between downtown Cincinnati and Ramona Station; the site is now the location of Indian Hill's administration building at Drake and Shawnee Run roads. The rolling country appealed to a group of four Cincinnati businessmen who had built homes there in the early 1920s and envisioned a more ambitious rural settlement, persuading friends to join them in 1924 in forming the Camargo Realty Co. Camargo assembled 12,000 acres (49 km 2) of farmland and divided some into 25-acre (100,000 m 2) plots, sold for $75 to $150 per acre, and a district of grand mansions with stables and outbuildings grew up, with kennels that housed the Camargo Hunt. Some were authentic estates, such as the 1,200-acre (4.9 km 2) "Peterloon" of John J.