Pole Bending Horses for Sale near Fennville, MI

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Paint Pony - Horse for Sale in Benton Harbor, MI 49022-93
Freckles
Freckles is green broke to walk, trot, canter and back up. He needs work on..
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Bay
Paint Pony
Gelding
10
Benton Harbor, MI
MI
Sold
Quarter Horse Stallion
Zeke would be great at reining, cutting, roping, barrels, poles, halter, e..
Hastings, Michigan
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Hastings, MI
MI
$3,000
Appendix Stallion
Remedy is a great competition horse. He runs clean and consistent each and ..
Hastings, Michigan
Chestnut
Appendix
Stallion
-
Hastings, MI
MI
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Quiet calm horse. He has tons of speed to be competitive. He is sweet and ..
Hastings, Michigan
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Hastings, MI
MI
$4,000
Paint Stallion
Bo is an exceptional inidividual with the athleticism to be competitive in..
Delton, Michigan
Black
Paint
Stallion
-
Delton, MI
MI
$4,500
Paint Mare
ariat is a real people lover raised with dogs, cats and children. she is h..
Gobles, Michigan
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Gobles, MI
MI
$300
Paint Stallion
Thunder is a fast horse, very stocky build. He would be a great trail horse..
Delton, Michigan
Paint
Stallion
-
Delton, MI
MI
$1,700
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About Fennville, MI

The "official" and widely accepted account of how the city came to be known as Fennville, is that an early white settler by the name of Elam Atwater Fenn built a saw mill in the immediate vicinity of the current community. This led to people referring to the settlement as "Fenn's Mill" which became the name associated with the post office there. Some early documents pluralized "Mill" to render "Fenn's Mills." The first road through what was to be Fennville was built by Harrison Hutchins and James McCormick in 1837. A fire (possibly related to the Great Chicago Fire or Great Michigan Fire) destroyed the village in October 1871. About that time, the paperwork (timetables and such) for the recently completed Chicago and Michigan Lake Shore Railroad arrived which identified the community's station as "Fennville." This was thought by some at the time (including Hutchins) to have been the result of clerical error.