Trail Horses for Sale near Rockport, AR

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Pine Bluff, AR 71603
Reba
This is a good walk trot horse easy to ride has won have had kids show her ..
Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
17
Pine Bluff, AR
AR
$8,500
Belgian Draft - Horse for Sale in Perry, AR 72126
Brenna
Brenna is 17 and a gentle giant. She will plow and pull wagon. We have most..
Perry, Arkansas
Chestnut
Belgian Draft
Mare
18
Perry, AR
AR
Sold
Paint Mare
Pretty Paint Mare Sadie is a really well behaved mare who would make someo..
Maumelle, Arkansas
Paint
Mare
-
Maumelle, AR
AR
$1,000
Paint Mare
Saidie is a really well behaved mare who would make someone a great trail ..
Maumelle, Arkansas
Paint
Mare
-
Maumelle, AR
AR
$1,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Scored is a big, black gelding, who has recently had 30 days proffesional ..
Benton, Arkansas
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Benton, AR
AR
$4,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
MIcrochipped by state of Arkansas for identification purposes. Up to date ..
Prattsville, Arkansas
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Prattsville, AR
AR
$1,250
Quarter Horse Stallion
Dreamer is a good hunter, dressage or eventing prospect. Originally used ..
Sherwood, Arkansas
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Sherwood, AR
AR
$4,000
Mule Stallion
Gorgous 10y / o Saddlebred (unregistered) Looks like Trigger with 4 white s..
Little Rock, Arkansas
Palomino
Mule
Stallion
-
Little Rock, AR
AR
$2,400
Draft Mare
Shiloh is a green broke draft cross mare. She makes Wonderful babies, and ..
Sherwood, Arkansas
Sorrel
Draft
Mare
-
Sherwood, AR
AR
$900
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
solid black missouri fox trotter has had training in trail riding and is sh..
Tull, Arkansas
Black
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Tull, AR
AR
$3,500
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About Rockport, AR

Rockport is one of the oldest named places in Arkansas. Although the present city is overshadowed by Malvern, Rockport served as the county seat of Hot Spring County from 1846 to 1879 and was a landmark community of Arkansas for many years both before and after that time. Large novaculite boulders in the bed of the Ouachita River made the location of Rockport ideal as both a river crossing and a resting place for weary river travelers. These boulders gave the community its name. A plaque in Rockport states that Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto visited the location in 1541, although current historians are less certain about the exact route that de Soto and his group traveled while west of the Mississippi River.