Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near McClure, OH

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Tennessee Walking Mare
5 yr old, 15. 2 hh, bay roan, TWH mare. Good trail horse anyone that ride..
Camden, Michigan
Bay Roan
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Camden, MI
MI
$1,200
Tennessee Walking Mare
5 yr old 15. 2 hh green broke gaited TWH Mare. Impeccable ground manners a..
Camden, Michigan
Bay Roan
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Camden, MI
MI
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Skip is a wonderful gelding. Always willing to please. he is a bit skittis..
Perrysburg, Ohio
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Perrysburg, OH
OH
$700
Tennessee Walking Mare
B. B. is supposed to be a 4 year old Tennessee Walker cross. She is all bl..
Bowling Green, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bowling Green, OH
OH
$600
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Blue is a kind wonderful trail horse who will go anywhere you ask. He's be..
Findlay, Ohio
Gray
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Findlay, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Molly is very sweet and willing. She is awesome on trails at Oak Openings, ..
Bowling Green, Ohio
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Bowling Green, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Jet black / white paint, with symmetrical markings right / left. comfortabl..
Delphos, Ohio
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Delphos, OH
OH
$2,400
Tennessee Walking Mare
i am selling this horse for a friend due to his health. this mare is only 3..
Cecil, Ohio
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Cecil, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
i am selling this horse for a friend due to his health. this mare is 16 and..
Cecil, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Cecil, OH
OH
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
I am selling this horse for a friend due to his health. This mare was orpha..
Cecil, Ohio
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Cecil, OH
OH
$2,500
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About McClure, OH

McClure was laid out in the late 1870s, and named after John McClure, an original owner of the town site. In the 1960s and the first half of the 1970s, McClure had the distinction of being the last place in Ohio with a manual telephone system. Since the installation of the first telephone system in the 1890s, by The Ohio Bell Telephone Co., residents used the same method to signal their town's operator; they turned a crank on their phone. The operator in most cases knew their voice or knew the person being called. They had phone numbers, such as 6, or 328, or 77, but as the operators knew everyone's name, numbers were rarely used.