Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale in Brooksville FL, Hudson FL

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Tennessee Walking Mare
Two awesome black mares, 5 yr. old is a Pusher grandaughter, beautiful loos..
Brooksville, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Brooksville, FL
FL
$2,250
Tennessee Walking Stallion
2004 SENIOR MODEL STALLIONS WORLD GRAND CHAMPION - - UNANIMOUSLY - - Picass..
Hudson, Florida
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Hudson, FL
FL
$400
Tennessee Walking Stallion
I have a Reg. TWH Gelding for sale. He is black with a white blaze and whit..
Zephyrhills, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Zephyrhills, FL
FL
$1,800
Tennessee Walking Mare
Tennessee Walker Mare - Black, 12 yrs. old, bred awesome, Ebony's Pure Carb..
Brooksville, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Brooksville, FL
FL
$3,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
Anyone can ride this horse. She has smooth gates. Loads, ties. clips. Stra..
Wauchula, Florida
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Wauchula, FL
FL
$3,200
Tennessee Walking Mare
she is a very hyper horse but she is not a mean horse she don't kick or buc..
Tampa, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Tampa, FL
FL
$1,300
Tennessee Walking Stallion
15 year TWH & QH gelding big stout guy. Alittle shy at first but as he kno..
Brooksville, Florida
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Brooksville, FL
FL
$1,500
2

About Tampa, FL

When the pioneer community living near the US Army outpost of Fort Brooke was incorporated in 1849, it was called "Tampa Town", and the name was shortened to simply "Tampa" in 1855. The earliest instance of the name "Tampa", in the form "Tanpa", appears in the memoirs of Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda, who spent 17 years as a captive of the Calusa and traveled through much of peninsular Florida. He described Tanpa as an important Calusa town to the north of the Calusa domain, possibly under another chief. Archaeologist Jerald Milanich places the town of Tanpa at the mouth of Charlotte Harbor. The entrances to Tampa Bay and Charlotte Harbor are obscured by barrier islands, and their locations, and the names applied to them, were a source of confusion to explorers, surveyors and map-makers from the 16th century though the 18th century.