Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Lynnwood, WA

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Miss Manners
Sis is very smart. She is very nicely gaited.but she needs lots of work.ver..
Tacoma, Washington
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
19
Tacoma, WA
WA
Sold
Tennessee Walking Mare
2004 Washington and Oregon High Point Weanling Filly Miss Macy Gray is a c..
Kent, Washington
Gray
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Kent, WA
WA
$8,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Wounderful horses for an experienced rider. the Wiced Norht has bean show s..
Auburn, Washington
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Auburn, WA
WA
$5,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
coming four year old ready to start. Good looking well bilt. Nice to work w..
Auburn, Washington
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Auburn, WA
WA
$2,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Must sell my beautiful horse. Registered Tennessee Walker Tobiano. Good tem..
Arlington, Washington
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Arlington, WA
WA
$6,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Registered TW & Spotted Saddle horse. He is just coming three but knows ho..
Tacoma, Washington
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Tacoma, WA
WA
$5,500
1

About Lynnwood, WA

Prior to contact with American settlers, the Snohomish tribe of Native Americans used the area of modern-day Lynnwood for summertime activities, including hunting, fishing, berry gathering, and root cultivation. The Snohomish were relocated to the Tulalip reservation, near modern-day Marysville, after the signing of the Treaty of Point Elliott in 1855, opening the area for American settlement. Brown's Bay, part of Puget Sound, and modern-day Meadowdale were surveyed by American loggers in 1859. Logging on Brown's Bay began in 1860, and the first American settlers arrived in the 1880s. Scottish-born stonemason Duncan Hunter became the area's first white resident in 1889, filing an 80-acre (32 ha) land claim on modern-day 36th Avenue Southwest after moving west from Wisconsin.