Reining Horses for Sale near Wetumpka, AL

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Wetumpka, AL 36093
Jet Black cue
Cue is the dream mare. She will take you anywhere you want to go. She has m..
Wetumpka, Alabama
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
19
Wetumpka, AL
AL
$4,000
Paint Mare
APHA registered ~04 red dun tobiano paint mare; 14. 2 hands; excellent ped..
Lowndesboro, Alabama
Red Dun
Paint
Mare
-
Lowndesboro, AL
AL
$2,000
Paint Mare
APHA solid bay with blaze - stocky quarterhorse build, great bloodlines, u..
Lowndesboro, Alabama
Paint
Mare
-
Lowndesboro, AL
AL
$500
Paint Stallion
Stitch is my favorite horse at the barn! He is not for a beginner because ..
Auburn, Alabama
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Auburn, AL
AL
$5,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Nice solid bay filly with Poco Bueno and Poco Pine on the top and Cutter B..
Letohatchee, Alabama
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Letohatchee, AL
AL
$2,500
Gelding By Clus Kid
World class 2-23-02 yearling sorrel gelding by Clus Kid (Kid Clue x Joy Car..
Letohatchee, Alabama
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Letohatchee, AL
AL
$2,500
1

About Wetumpka, AL

Wetumpka was long settled by the Muscogee people, whose territory extended through present-day Georgia and Alabama. Their largest towns were on the banks of the Coosa and at its confluence with the Tallapoosa River, at Wetumpka and Talisi (now Tallassee), respectively. After moving the 1702 settlement of Mobile to Mobile Bay in 1711, Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville sent an expedition up the Alabama River to establish a fort in the interior of the colony, known as La Louisiane or New France, to stop the encroachment of British colonists and to foster trade and goodwill with the Creek. Bienville directed the construction of Fort Toulouse along the Coosa River in 1714, 4 miles (6 km) above the confluence of the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers and the Creek village of Taskigi. Bienville selected this area as a strategic locale for a fortification.