All-Around Quarter Horses for Sale near Everett, WA

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Concrete, WA 98237
Summer
AQHA Registration pending. Born 06/05/2021. Driftwood/Blue Valentine/ Hanco..
Concrete, Washington
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
3
Concrete, WA
WA
$6,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Arlington, WA 98223
Lilac
Quarter Horse, chestnut mare, 15h, lilac is a super sweet mare, she is quie..
Arlington, Washington
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
20
Arlington, WA
WA
$8,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Monroe, WA 98272
Easter Flowers
Sweet tempered mare intermediate to advanced rider. $1200. Job loss forces ..
Monroe, Washington
Tobiano
Quarter Horse
Mare
24
Monroe, WA
WA
$1,200
Quarter Horse Stallion
Sun Dun Zippo is "dunbelieveable". He has 56 ABRA pts to date with 40+ pts..
Port Orchard, Washington
Dun
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Port Orchard, WA
WA
$750
Quarter Horse Mare
This filly has loads of personality and has a real desire to please. She i..
Arlington, Washington
Red Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Arlington, WA
WA
$6,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Miss Okie cal girl Aka "sugar". This is a nice horse she has done it all ..
Kent, Washington
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Kent, WA
WA
$1,500
1

About Everett, WA

The Port Gardner peninsula was originally inhabited by local Coast Salish tribes, including the Snohomish, who maintained a winter village at Hibulb (also called Hebolb) at the mouth of the Snohomish River. The area was explored by the Vancouver Expedition of 1792, which landed on a beach on the modern Everett waterfront on June 4 and claimed the land for England. The Snohomish and other tribes signed the Treaty of Point Elliott in 1855, relocating to the nearby Tulalip Indian Reservation and relinquishing its lands to the territorial government, opening the region to American settlement. The first permanent American settler to arrive on the peninsula was Dennis Brigham, a carpenter from Worcester, Massachusetts, who claimed a 160-acre (0.6 km 2) homestead on Port Gardner Bay in 1861 and built a cabin for himself. He was joined by several other families on their own homesteads, which included the establishment of a general store and a sawmill that quickly went out of business.