Western Pleasure Horses for Sale near Brookfield, IL

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Paint - Horse for Sale in Saint Charles, IL 60175
Paint Stallion
Diesel has been my son's best friend through high school and now my son is..
Saint Charles, Illinois
Tobiano
Paint
Stallion
-
Saint Charles, IL
IL
$2,500
Appaloosa Gelding
Blue is a flashy Appaloosa gelding. He is 14.2 hands and has two blue eyes...
Winfield, Illinois
Appaloosa
Gelding
-
Winfield, IL
IL
$235
Paint Mare
Looking for a ~blonde~ that is beautiful and smart? This is Five Star Rev..
Wadsworth, Illinois
Palomino
Paint
Mare
-
Wadsworth, IL
IL
$5,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Exceptionally breed, fully trained mare ready to get you to Congress or mo..
Valparaiso, Indiana
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Valparaiso, IN
IN
$1,500
Appendix Mare
She is about 20 now and knows it all. She has the sweetest personality yo..
Sycamore, Illinois
Bay
Appendix
Mare
-
Sycamore, IL
IL
$500
Quarter Horse Stallion
At his first show (with a first - time dressage rider) , Petey won first p..
Morton Grove, Illinois
Bay
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Morton Grove, IL
IL
$15,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Loving, and lively western pleasure horse for sale to anyone interested in..
Frankfort, Illinois
Brown
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Frankfort, IL
IL
$4,000

About Brookfield, IL

Before 1803, the area now called Brookfield was mostly covered by prairie grasses, forests, and farms. Large portions of the area were inhabited by the Native Americans who long ago developed agriculture and corn cultivation, built villages and burial mounds, invented the bow and arrow, and made beautiful pottery. [ citation needed ] Settlement of the village dates to 1889 when Samuel Eberly Gross, a Chicago lawyer turned real estate investor, began selling building lots plotted from farms and woodlands he had acquired along both sides of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad line, which provided passenger and freight service between Chicago and Aurora, Illinois. "Grossdale", as his development was originally called, offered suburban living at prices affordable to working-class families. The first two buildings Gross erected were a train station south of the tracks at what is now Prairie Avenue, and a pavilion across the tracks.