Paint Horses for Sale near Oviedo, FL

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Melbourne, FL 32901
Winners Fear Me
Winners Gonna Fear Me also known as Jet is a pure APH with a stunning black..
Melbourne, Florida
Black Overo
Paint
Gelding
7
Melbourne, FL
FL
$3,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Lake Helen, FL 32744
Destiny
Destiny is a very sweet mare that likes attention and needs it She needs a ..
Lake Helen, Florida
Tobiano
Paint
Mare
14
Lake Helen, FL
FL
$3,500
Paint - Horse for Sale in Edgewater, FL 32141
Justwhatwe
"Just What We Ordered" registered name - ad wouldn't allow that m..
Edgewater, Florida
Cremello
Paint
Stallion
19
Edgewater, FL
FL
$7,500
Paint - Horse for Sale in Deland, FL 32720
Ringo
Perlino Paint Gelding 15.3 hands.. stocky.. blue eyes.. great ground manner..
Deland, Florida
Perlino
Paint
Gelding
13
Deland, FL
FL
$2,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Kissimmee, FL 34744
Tobiana
Beautiful Black and White Paint Mare, 11yo 14,2H. She stands for farrier, b..
Kissimmee, Florida
Tobiano
Paint
Mare
17
Kissimmee, FL
FL
$6,000
Paint - Horse for Sale in Oviedo, FL 32765
First Blue Ice
First Blue Ice “Vixen” is a gorgeous 2007 double registered APHA/PtHA overo..
Oviedo, Florida
Buckskin Overo
Paint
Mare
18
Oviedo, FL
FL
Sold
Paint - Horse for Sale in Altoona, FL 32702
River
Beautiful sorrel and white tobiano paint mare selling grade. Awesome on the..
Altoona, Florida
Tobiano
Paint
Mare
16
Altoona, FL
FL
Sold

About Oviedo, FL

Up through the early 19th century, the area encompassing Oviedo was sparsely populated save for a few Seminoles and African-American Freemen who associated with the Seminole tribe, known as Black Seminoles, in what was then Spanish Florida. The Seminole tribe had larger clusters of population in other areas of Central Florida, such as nearby Lake Jesup. The population remained sparse until after the American Civil War, when people devastated by war starting moving South to begin a new life. One mile to the southeast side of Lake Jesup, a small hamlet of settlers established the "Lake Jesup Settlement" in 1875. Letters from that era showcased a difficult life for the Florida Cracker settlers: cooking outdoors with wood stoves, sleeping under mosquito nets, and burning rags to keep the insects away.