Spotted Saddle Horses for Sale near Madison, GA

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Spotted Saddle Stallion
Drago is a beautiful smoky black / white tobiano colt. Dam= reg. Palomino ..
Locust Grove, Georgia
Other
Spotted Saddle
Stallion
-
Locust Grove, GA
GA
$900
Spotted Saddle Mare
beautiful, flashy, black & white tobiano mare. Very gentle and good natur..
Bishop, Georgia
Black Overo
Spotted Saddle
Mare
-
Bishop, GA
GA
$3,200
Spotted Saddle Stallion
pretty, sorrel & white, well trained, gentle spotted saddle horse. Experie..
Bishop, Georgia
Sorrel
Spotted Saddle
Stallion
-
Bishop, GA
GA
$3,500
Spotted Saddle Mare
Beautiful SSH 3 yr old mare, flashy, eye - catching markings, very smooth ..
Bishop, Georgia
Spotted Saddle
Mare
-
Bishop, GA
GA
$3,500
Spotted Saddle Stallion
One of a kind stallion that herd breeds only. We let nature keep Dancer in..
Mcdonough, Georgia
Spotted Saddle
Stallion
-
Mcdonough, GA
GA
$100
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About Madison, GA

Madison was described in an early 19th-century issue of White's Statistics of Georgia as "the most cultured and aristocratic town on the stagecoach route from Charleston to New Orleans." In an 1849 edition of White's Statistics of Georgia, the following was written about Madison: "In point of intelligence, refinement, and hospitality, this town acknowledges no superior." On December 12, 1809, the town, named for 4th United States president, James Madison, was incorporated. While many believe that Sherman spared the town because it was too beautiful to burn during his March to the Sea, the truth is that Madison was home to pro-Union Congressman (later Senator) Joshua Hill. Hill had ties with General William Tecumseh Sherman's brother in the House of Representatives, so his sparing the town was more political than appreciation of its beauty. In 1895 Madison was reported to have an oil mill with a capital of $35,000, a soap factory, a fertilizer factory, four steam ginneries, a mammoth compress, two carriage factories, a furniture factory, a grist and flouringmill, a bottling works, a distillery with a capacity of 120 gallons a day, an ice factory with a capital of $10,500, a canning factory with a capital of $10,000, a bank with a capital of $75,000, surplus $12,000, and a number of small industries operated by individual enterprise. Against the backdrop of this Jim Crow-era prosperity, white Madisonians participated in at least three documented lynchings of African Americans.