Rocky Mountain Horses for Sale near Mendota, VA

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Rocky Mountain Mare
Ebony is a beautiful black double registered Rocky Mountain filly. She is ..
Limestone, Tennessee
Black
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$3,000
Rocky Mountain Mare
Diamond is just as laid back and calm as you would want. Loves to be pett..
Limestone, Tennessee
Black
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$2,500
Rocky Mountain Stallion
Cruise is an exceptional palomino stallion. He's 1 / 2 brother to UM 2- 3..
Limestone, Tennessee
Palomino
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$6,500
Rocky Mountain Stallion
Tennessee Freedom is a registered RMHA chocolate gelding. He is a 1 / 2 b..
Limestone, Tennessee
Chocolate
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$1,800
Rocky Mountain Mare
Tucker is an extremely friendly filly. She is the first one to meet you i..
Limestone, Tennessee
Bay
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$1,200
Rocky Mountain Mare
Sierra is a beautiful bay weanling filly. She has her own personality, fr..
Limestone, Tennessee
Bay
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$1,500
Rocky Mountain Mare
Jasmine is a beautiful black yearling filly. Sweet, loves to be groomed & ..
Limestone, Tennessee
Black
Rocky Mountain
Mare
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$2,500
Rocky Mountain Stallion
Excellent registered Rocky Mtn. Black - bleaches to bay. Halter broke, eas..
Limestone, Tennessee
Black
Rocky Mountain
Stallion
-
Limestone, TN
TN
$1,800
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About Mendota, VA

In 1770, Peter Livingston and his family settled on 2,000 acres beside the North Fork of the Holston River at the mouth of Livingston Creek near present day Mendota, Virginia. The beautiful and fertile river bottoms of his farm yielded good crops and he soon had expanded his cleared land to several acres and eventually brought in slaves to help him work it. All appeared well until the morning of April 6, 1794, when the feared, Cherokee Chief Benge and his followers quietly crept upon the unsuspecting cabins in an attempt to capture enslaved people to sell to the British. Working some distance away in the fields, Peter and his brother Henry only suspected trouble when they saw smoke rising from the direction of their homes. Rushing back to the scene, they soon learned that their wives and some of their slaves had been carried off.