Reining Horses for Sale near Four Oaks, NC

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Broadway, NC 27505
Paint Stallion
We provide a complete mare and stallion management Our breeding facility o..
Broadway, North Carolina
Paint
Stallion
-
Broadway, NC
NC
Contact
Paint - Horse for Sale in Broadway, NC 27505
Paint Mare
Classy Sweet Chic 2012 APHA solid sorrel mare Sire: The sweet spot by: Mar..
Broadway, North Carolina
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
12
Broadway, NC
NC
$7,000
Paint Mare
Possibly homozygous for the Tobiano gene, tests are pending. Very nice gi..
Godwin, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
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Godwin, NC
NC
$6,500
Paint Mare
A beautiful APHA Reg. Painted Dun filly to please. Halter broke, leads, ti..
Godwin, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
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Godwin, NC
NC
$10,000
Paint Mare
APHA Registered Filly, with a very powerful hind end on this filly, with f..
Godwin, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
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Godwin, NC
NC
$12,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Black Reigning stallion champion bloodlines, double bred King and Doc O Le..
Autryville, North Carolina
Black
Quarter Horse
Stallion
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Autryville, NC
NC
$400
Quarter Horse Stallion
Foundation bred colt. Should reg. at 89% NFQHA. Can also be reg. AQHA and ..
Zebulon, North Carolina
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Stallion
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Zebulon, NC
NC
$2,200
Paint Stallion
His dam, Smokin Truffle was shown in NRHA Limited Open. She is a 1 / 2 sis..
Lucama, North Carolina
Bay
Paint
Stallion
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Lucama, NC
NC
$4,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Star and snip. Right Hind Sock. No other markings. Out of a Bob Acre Doc an..
Selma, North Carolina
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
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Selma, NC
NC
$7,500
Half Arabian Mare
RF Rosalita de Gomez is a very elegant 15. 1h, 4 year old, chestnut 1 / 2 A..
Durham, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
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Durham, NC
NC
$3,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Beautiful horse looking for someone to take him to the heights! This horse..
Apex, North Carolina
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Apex, NC
NC
$8,500
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About Four Oaks, NC

Four Oaks was one of several towns founded along a branch of the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, completed though Johnston County in 1886. Four Oaks—named for four oak tree sprouts growing from a stump—incorporated in 1889, and at that time had a post office, a public gin, saw and grist mills, a saloon and general store, a church, and a population of 25. Cotton and tobacco farming were notable industries in the surrounding community. A brick school for white students opened in 1923. By the 1930s, several rural schools near Four Oaks consolidated, and enrollment at the brick school increased to over 1,900 students, after which the school claimed to be the world's "largest rural consolidated school".