Reining Horses for Sale near Chinquapin, NC

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Quarter Horse Stallion
Black Reigning stallion champion bloodlines, double bred King and Doc O Le..
Autryville, North Carolina
Black
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Autryville, NC
NC
$400
Appaloosa Stallion
beautiful reg. appaloosa, very gentle, handled and ridden by youths. No ba..
Wilmington, North Carolina
Black
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Wilmington, NC
NC
$3,000
Paint Mare
Jewel is an APHA Reg. buckskin tobiano filly. She has a long list of Rein..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Buckskin
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$2,500
Paint Mare
QTS CHEYENNE PRINCESS is a black tobiano filly. Her temperment is to die ..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$1,800
Paint Mare
Ransom is broke to ride w / reining. In foal to DOUBLE homozygous Buckski..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$5,000
Paint Mare
Ransom is a big and beautiful mare. She is in foal to APHA DOUBLE HOMOZYG..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$5,000
Paint Mare
SOLD!!SOLD!!!Beautiful tobiano filly. Excellent potential. Show horse qua..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$1,500
Paint Mare
This girl has it all! She is very well broke to ride. She leads, load, cl..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Palomino
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$2,800
Appaloosa Mare
Yearling Filly. Daughter to Big Duke Six and half sister to Bud at Six, Wo..
Beulaville, North Carolina
Dun
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Beulaville, NC
NC
$5,000
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About Chinquapin, NC

The roots of Chinquapin, North Carolina lie largely with the Thigpen family, who migrated to the area from Perquimans Precinct in the 1730s. James Thigpen, the first of the Duplin County Thigpens, obtained a patent for land bordering the Northeast Cape Fear River, establishing a plantation he called “Chinquapen Orchard.” James and his kin named many of the creeks around their new home after those in Perquimans – Cypress Creek, Muddy Creek, even Chinquapin itself. An Algonquian word, chinquapin, or "chinkapin," is a diminutive cousin of the American chestnut that is abundant along creeks and rivers of the Southeastern United States. According to Bible records, James Thigpen died at Chinquapen Orchard in 1737. His son, Dr.