Show Horses for Sale near Galax, VA

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Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Austinville, VA 24312
Curly Sue
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 10/04 @ 5PM CT. More informat..
Austinville, Virginia
Tobiano
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
9
Austinville, VA
VA
$31,500
Any
I am looking for a new addition to our family a friesian mare or gelding mu..
Meadows Of Dan, Virginia
Black
Friesian
Mare
24
Meadows Of Dan, VA
VA
Contact
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Beam has been an excellent show horse and will make an excellent breeding ..
Bland, Virginia
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Bland, VA
VA
$3,200
Tennessee Walking Mare
Diana is a big lit up grey roan mare that will make an excellent show, tra..
Bland, Virginia
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bland, VA
VA
$10,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
"Coin" is a nice big sorrel mare with a blaze and rear sock. She is green ..
Bland, Virginia
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bland, VA
VA
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
"Remedy" is a nice big black mare that is will broke. Excellent trail hor..
Bland, Virginia
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bland, VA
VA
$2,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
Double Creek Farm Barn Raisin' Sale, BROKE horses starting at $1000, palomi..
Dobson, North Carolina
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Dobson, NC
NC
$1,000
Paint Stallion
Beautifully marked sorrel and white overo, nicely built, big colt, has been..
Wytheville, Virginia
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Wytheville, VA
VA
$2,500
1

About Galax, VA

The area that later became Galax was part of an 800-acre (320 ha) land grant given to James Buchanan in 1756 by the English Crown. The first plat map for Galax is dated December 1903; The town founders selected the site for the city on a wide expanse of meadowland bisected by Chestnut Creek and sitting at an altitude of 2,500 feet on a plateau. The Virginia General Assembly officially chartered the town of Galax in 1906. The town is named for Galax urceolata , an evergreen groundcover plant found throughout the Blue Ridge Mountains. At the time, the plant was gathered and sold by many people in southwestern Virginia and northwestern North Carolina as an ornamental plant; a Norfolk and Western Railway Company official suggested that the town be named for the plant.