Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Midlothian, TX

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Justin, TX 76247
She's Baby Blue
Gorgeous 10 yr TWH mare, 15.2H, black/White Tob, gaited. Perfect confirmati..
Justin, Texas
Tobiano
Tennessee Walking
Mare
14
Justin, TX
TX
Sold
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Dallas, TX 75211
Tennessee Walking Mare
Text or call for more questions..
Dallas, Texas
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
16
Dallas, TX
TX
Contact
Rusty
Beautiful shinny healthy well bred gaited colt. Very sweet, good temperamen..
Terrell, Texas
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
5
Terrell, TX
TX
$6,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Gumby is an 8 year old, black, TW gelding. He stands about 16 hands and w..
Keller, Texas
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Keller, TX
TX
$2,800
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Zip is a beautiful bay gelding TW / QH who was underfed when I got him. I..
Weatherford, Texas
Bay
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Weatherford, TX
TX
$1,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Must find good home for my horse immediately. She is a black tobiano TW 2 ..
Mesquite, Texas
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Mesquite, TX
TX
Contact
Tennessee Walking Stallion
by Luck of the Doc, out of our very own Slightly Scarlet. He is of the cali..
Burleson, Texas
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Burleson, TX
TX
$500

About Midlothian, TX

In the early 1800s, settlements began to take place in the area that became Ellis County, but full colonization of this area was slow until 1846, when Sam Houston finalized peace treaties between several of the indigenous inhabitants of the region and the Republic of Texas. The earliest inhabitants of this area were the Tonkawa people, but other tribes also hunted in this area, including the Anadarko people, Bidai, Kickapoo, and Waco. The future Ellis County area of the young Republic of Texas was known as the Peters Colony, named for a Louisville, Kentucky-based land grant company consisting of English and American investors. The young Republic empresario grant program encouraged settlements in North Texas in 1857. The few settlers who lived in this region trapped animals and sold their pelts, and traded goods with the natives.