Trail Horses for Sale in Sweetwater TN, Philadelphia TN

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Sweetwater, TN 37874
Trigger
Safe honest trail horse, he has been rode all over the Ozark Mountains and ..
Sweetwater, Tennessee
Cremello
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
16
Sweetwater, TN
TN
$5,000
Racking - Horse for Sale in Philadelphia, TN 37846
Rowdy
Rowdy If your looking for a good show horse here he is gelding with papers ..
Philadelphia, Tennessee
Sorrel
Racking
Gelding
17
Philadelphia, TN
TN
$4,500
Standardbred - Horse for Sale in Philadelphia, TN 37846
Buster
6 year old can fly down the road has all the speed you need and super smoot..
Philadelphia, Tennessee
Bay
Standardbred
Gelding
9
Philadelphia, TN
TN
$6,200
Donkey - Horse for Sale in Louisville, TN 37777
Big Sister
In search of a bred mini Jenny to be a “big sister” to our year old mini ge..
Louisville, Tennessee
Chocolate
Donkey
Mare
8
Louisville, TN
TN
Contact
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Sweetwater, TN 37874
Lopen Till Seven
2005 AQHA Sorrel Gelding w lots of chrome: Lopen Till Seven. 15.2 H Bred an..
Sweetwater, Tennessee
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Gelding
20
Sweetwater, TN
TN
$7,500
Dixie
If you are looking for a pretty show horse look no further. Dixie is 16 han..
Philadelphia, Tennessee
Tobiano
Paint
Mare
12
Philadelphia, TN
TN
$3,000
Other Mare
--motivated seller, have a big gelding im looking at, can only have one!---..
Maryville, Tennessee
Roan
Other
Mare
23
Maryville, TN
TN
$1,500

About Englewood, TN

In 1857, businessman John Dixon established the Eureka Cotton Mills near what is now Englewood where they used regionally-grown cotton to produce yarn. The small mill community that developed around the mill became known as Eureka Mills. By 1875, Elisha Brient, a partner of Dixon, and several of Brient's relatives had acquired Eureka Cotton Mills, and in 1894 the Brients renamed the town of Eureka Mills "Englewood". The name was suggested by Nancy Chestnutt, a sister-in-law of James Brient, who thought the area resembled the English forests of the Robin Hood tales she had read about as a child. In the late 19th century, the Brients began building shops and gristmills approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of their milltown at a railroad stop called Tellico Junction, where the Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railroad (which roughly followed modern U.S.