Horses for Sale in Marlow OK, Blanchard OK

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Quarter Horse Stallion
"Biscuit" started out to be a race horse but has no interest as he is real..
Marlow, Oklahoma
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Marlow, OK
OK
$1,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Shiner's Cowboy Cooper is a great stallion. Has not bred. I dont have the ..
Marlow, Oklahoma
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Marlow, OK
OK
$4,500
Paint Mare
This mare is started under saddle and riding really nice she has been turn..
Blanchard, Oklahoma
Paint
Mare
-
Blanchard, OK
OK
$1,000
Quarter Horse Mare
We got her last year she was not started under saddle yet. she is now and..
Blanchard, Oklahoma
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Blanchard, OK
OK
$1,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
This gray gelding moves low and soft on the front end. He is progressing i..
Sulphur, Oklahoma
Gray
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Sulphur, OK
OK
$3,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
He is around 16 hands tall He is 5 years old He is an AQHA Palomino geldi..
Comanche, Oklahoma
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Comanche, OK
OK
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Smoke is by Great Shamokin Dude x Dreams Beginning. A great prospect for r..
Mcloud, Oklahoma
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Mcloud, OK
OK
$1,200

About Pauls Valley, OK

The area that eventually became the city of Pauls Valley was one of the earliest European-American settlements in what was then known as Indian Territory. Smith Paul, born in 1809 in New Bern, North Carolina, discovered the fertile bottom land which is now Pauls Valley while a member of a wagon train traveling to California. Paul described the land as "a section where the bottom land was rich and blue stem grass grew so high that a man on horseback was almost hidden in its foliage." The Tri-Party Treaty of January 1, 1837, ceded this part of what is now the State of Oklahoma to the Chickasaw Nation. When the Chickasaw people were relocated to Indian Territory that year, Smith Paul moved with them and married Ela-Teecha, a Chickasaw woman. In 1847, the Pauls established a plantation on the rich Garvin County bottom land, where Rush Creek joined the Washita River, which became known to locals as "Smith Paul's Valley".