Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Albany, OR

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Albany, OR 97321
Kimber
We are looking to sell my daughters Registered TWH. 14 years old 14.3 hands..
Albany, Oregon
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
15
Albany, OR
OR
$2,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Xena is a beautiful 10 year old Tennessee Walking mare. She is registered...
Carlton, Oregon
Other
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Carlton, OR
OR
$4,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
Snow is a 9 YO proven show horse. Shows at all 3 gaits and has been out on ..
Carlton, Oregon
White
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Carlton, OR
OR
$8,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
With 9 WGC's in 4 generations, a better broodmare is hard to find. Delight ..
Salem, Oregon
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Salem, OR
OR
$3,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
MG's IMA LADY JFK "Ruby" is of Blue Blood, her pedigree speaks for itself. ..
Salem, Oregon
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Salem, OR
OR
$5,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
"Rainey" is a Splashed up Chestnut Roan Sabino with 4 whites, bald, belly s..
Salem, Oregon
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Salem, OR
OR
$3,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
"Rainey" is a Splashed up Chestnut Roan Sabino with 4 whites, bald, belly s..
Salem, Oregon
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Salem, OR
OR
$3,300
Tennessee Walking Mare
This gorgeous golden palomino filly is a very sweet and kind. Her sire is 4..
Lebanon, Oregon
Palomino
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Lebanon, OR
OR
$4,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Handsome sorrel gelding with a white mane. He is a fun smooth gaited horse..
Lebanon, Oregon
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Lebanon, OR
OR
$3,800
Tennessee Walking Mare
Glide down the trail on this well trained Gaited mare! Light rein, quick r..
Lebanon, Oregon
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Lebanon, OR
OR
$1,500
1

About Albany, OR

In the historic era, the area of the Willamette Valley that makes up modern-day Albany was inhabited by one of the tribes of the Kalapuya a Penutian-speaking, Native American people. The Kalapuya had named the area Takenah, a Kalapuyan word used to describe the deep pool at the confluence of the Calapooia and Willamette rivers. A variation of the place name can also be written as Tekenah. The Kalapuya population in the valley was between 4,000 and 20,000 before contact with Europeans, but they suffered high mortality from new infectious diseases introduced shortly afterward. The tribes were decimated by a smallpox epidemic that raged through the Pacific Northwest in 1782–83.