Quarter Horses for Sale in Brandenburg KY, Simpsonville KY

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Quarter Horse Stallion
Just Talk About is registered AQHA, FQHA, and NFQHA at 88% foundation. He i..
Brandenburg, Kentucky
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Brandenburg, KY
KY
$500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Easy is very accepting of everything you do. He loads, hauls, stands, clip..
Simpsonville, Kentucky
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Simpsonville, KY
KY
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Pepper will make a wonderful cow horse and breeding stallion. Traces to Buc..
Simpsonville, Kentucky
Blue Roan
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Simpsonville, KY
KY
$6,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
(Price Reduced) Big, stout and fast! Great disposition. Will make a good t..
Louisville, Kentucky
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Louisville, KY
KY
$2,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Very nicely bred, beautiful mare - she is an eyecatcher! Has that bulldog b..
Flaherty, Kentucky
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Flaherty, KY
KY
$3,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Red quarter mare in foal to red dun overo paint. Should throw paint baby, d..
Lawrenceburg, Kentucky
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Lawrenceburg, KY
KY
$1,000
Quarter Horse Mare
This little filly, is a sweetheart! I delivered this baby, & she alid in my..
Waddy, Kentucky
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Waddy, KY
KY
$900
Quarter Horse Mare
Jasmine is an own daughter of Good Version and an own Great Grand - daughte..
Owenton, Kentucky
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Owenton, KY
KY
$10,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Tes Twistin Two is a wonderful broodmare. She produces amazine show quality..
Elizabethtown, Kentucky
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Elizabethtown, KY
KY
$900
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About Indian Hills, KY

The community is named for local settler John Veech's Indian Hill Stock Farm, for a time one of the largest horse farms in Kentucky. Veech held over 300 acres (120 ha) as early as 1805, and his family continued to own most of the local land into the 20th century. The Georgian-style Veech house still stands at 125 Indian Hills Trail; the farm's springhouse is at 119 Arrowhead Road. (Both have been approved for listing on the National Register of Historic Places, but the property owners have so far opted against listing. ) An 1877 Louisville Courier-Journal article claims the name was adopted from the hundreds of Indians camped at the site at the time of Louisville's founding in 1778, but naming developments after Indians was generally fashionable in the late-19th century.