Quarter Horses for Sale near Mosinee, WI

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Edgar, WI 54426
Jack
Meet Wimpys Jack N Frost, Aka Jack. Jack is a beautiful 8 year old register..
Edgar, Wisconsin
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
11
Edgar, WI
WI
$5,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Wausau, WI 54403
Splash
I have an amazing all around prospect blue roan filly registered AQHA very ..
Wausau, Wisconsin
Blue Roan
Quarter Horse
Mare
4
Wausau, WI
WI
$4,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Amherst, WI 54406
Golden Omega "Grace"
Registered Bay Quarter Horse Mare. Bloodlines are: DocBar, Doc Hockum, Poc..
Amherst, Wisconsin
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
20
Amherst, WI
WI
$3,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Stevens Point, WI 54481
Quarter Horse Gelding
I am looking to lease Jericho out from September 2017 to May 2018. He is st..
Stevens Point, Wisconsin
Cremello
Quarter Horse
Gelding
19
Stevens Point, WI
WI
Contact
Quarter Horse Stallion
Attractive, athletic stallion / performance prospect who is a grandson of ..
Almond, Wisconsin
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Almond, WI
WI
$2,800
Quarter Horse Mare
We are downsizing our broodmare herd of own daughters of AQHA CHAMPION, Be..
Almond, Wisconsin
Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Almond, WI
WI
$1,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
SHILOH ACRES is offering this very attractive, athletic stallion / perform..
Almond, Wisconsin
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Almond, WI
WI
$4,000

About Mosinee, WI

The traditional inhabitants of the area were the Ojibwe, the Potawatomi and the Menominee. However, the name is the Hochunk Mōsį́nį, the "Cold Country," from mō, an old form of mą, meaning "earth, ground, land, country"; and sį́nį, "cold." The Ojibwe ceded the territory to the United States in 1837 when they sold most of their land in what would become Wisconsin, though they were guaranteed the right to continue hunting, fishing, and gathering wild rice on the ceded lands. Similarly, the Potawatomi gave up their land claims in Wisconsin in 1833, and the Menominee ceded territory in this area in the 1836 Treaty of the Cedars. These treaties coincided with the establishment of the first sawmill in the area by a white settler, John L. Moore, in 1836, and enabled white settlement to begin in the area.