Youth Horses for Sale near Osceola, MO

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Quarter Horse Mare
Good looking, western pleasure champions on papers - loves people - sweet ..
Warrensburg, Missouri
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Warrensburg, MO
MO
$900
Quarter Horse Mare
Maybe bred to paint stud - not trained - child has ridden bareback in fiel..
Warrensburg, Missouri
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Warrensburg, MO
MO
$1,000
Paint Mare
Price reduced until started under saddle. Cute BS Black filly. Will not ma..
Humansville, Missouri
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Humansville, MO
MO
$600
Tennessee Walking Mare
My Dusty Darling is a beautiful, rare TRUE BLACK. She stays black all year!..
Laurie, Missouri
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$1,500
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
Love is an unusually colored, blue papered MFT. She's chestnut with some ro..
Laurie, Missouri
Chestnut
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$1,750
Missouri Fox Trotter Mare
Love is an unusually colored, blue papered MFT. She's chestnut with some ro..
Laurie, Missouri
Chestnut
Missouri Fox Trotter
Mare
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$2,000
Missouri Fox Trotter Stallion
Stormy is a beautiful red roan with lots of Chrome! His Dam is a Zane Grey ..
Laurie, Missouri
Red Roan
Missouri Fox Trotter
Stallion
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$1,000
Paint Mare
Precious is just what her name implies. She is very, very gentle. She is st..
Laurie, Missouri
Paint
Mare
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$800
Quarter Horse Mare
Rain is a very well broke mare. She has been ridin everywhere and never off..
Bolivar, Missouri
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Bolivar, MO
MO
$1,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Icon's Flash is a 2 year old. He's already at least 15 hh and around 800 lb..
Laurie, Missouri
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Laurie, MO
MO
$1,500
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About Osceola, MO

Located on the Osage River, the land that became the town of Osceola was inhabited by the tribe of Osage Native Americans, also known as NiuKonska, Native Americans who gave the river its name. NiuKonska means "Little Ones of the Middle Waters". Two treaties, in 1808 and 1825, signed by the Osage and the U.S. government gave up all the tribe's land in Missouri. With the way cleared for non-native settlers, more people began to arrive in the St.