Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Altavista, VA

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Roanoke, VA 24013
Apache
This horse is a paint - black on white. Web site does not allow "paint..
Roanoke, Virginia
White
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
10
Roanoke, VA
VA
Sold
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Bedford, VA 24523
Blondie
15yr old 15.1hh TWH mare Blondie has a super nice running walk A nice slo..
Bedford, Virginia
Palomino
Tennessee Walking
Mare
17
Bedford, VA
VA
$4,000
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Amherst, VA 24521
Tennessee Walking Gelding
Shiloh is a great general-purpose riding horse. He is a ten-year-old 15.2 ..
Amherst, Virginia
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
18
Amherst, VA
VA
$1,500
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Virgilina, VA
Tennessee Walking Mare
If you love to ride, you will LOVE Carmelita! She has been ridden miles an..
Virgilina, Virginia
Buckskin
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Virgilina, VA
VA
$5,300
Tennessee Walking Mare
Twist is a sweet, friendly mare with a world class pedigree including World..
Lynchburg, Virginia
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Lynchburg, VA
VA
$5,000
Tennessee Walking Mare
Strawberry Roan Mare due to foal in June bred to Strawberry Roan Stud on pr..
Roanoke, Virginia
Roan
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Roanoke, VA
VA
$3,300
Tennessee Walking Mare
mare is grndtr of ebony masterpiece on top & glls carbon copy on botton due..
Roanoke, Virginia
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Roanoke, VA
VA
$3,300
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About Altavista, VA

The town of Altavista was created in 1905 during the construction of the east-west Tidewater Railway between Giles County (on the border with West Virginia) and Sewell's Point in what was at the time Norfolk County. Planned by Campbell County native William Nelson Page and financier and industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers, the Tidewater Railway was combined with the Deepwater Railway in West Virginia to form the new Virginian Railway in 1907. Although it was a common carrier and offered limited passenger service until 1956, the main purpose of the Virginian Railway was to haul bituminous coal from the mountains to coal piers on the ice-free harbor of Hampton Roads. Lane Brothers Construction Company was the contractor for constructing 32 miles (51 km) of the Tidewater Railway, including its crossing of the existing north-south Southern Railway in Campbell County. Three Lane brothers purchased 2,000 acres (8.1 km 2) of land near the point where the railroads would intersect, and had civil engineers lay out a new town with streets and lots, complete with water, sewer, telephone service, and electric lines.