Youth Horses for Sale near Mazomanie, WI

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Quarter Horse Mare
Great beginner or kid~s horse. Karen is a gentle and easy going 13 yr old..
Poynette, Wisconsin
Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Poynette, WI
WI
$1,000
Pony Mare
My owner juust hasnt had the time for me laately and thinks i deserve the ..
Madison, Wisconsin
Pony
Mare
-
Madison, WI
WI
$600
Quarter Horse Stallion
ZIPS Cash Cowboy is a SAFE and SOUND 2 yr old QH. He Has Been Handled Sinc..
La Valle, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
La Valle, WI
WI
$800
Arabian Mare
JS Indypendence, or Indy is a very personable, gorgeous young mare. She's ..
Arlington, Wisconsin
Gray
Arabian
Mare
-
Arlington, WI
WI
$3,000
Paint Mare
Snow is a gentle easy to catch mare. She has excellent lines for breeding a..
Arlington, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Paint
Mare
-
Arlington, WI
WI
$650
Quarter Horse Mare
Dusty is a 17 year old shooting horse supreme! She is a red dun 14. 3 hh Q..
Brooklyn, Wisconsin
Red Dun
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Brooklyn, WI
WI
$2,000
Half Arabian Mare
Tsulta is a non registered half arab mare by an AQHA stallion and out of th..
Madison, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Madison, WI
WI
$1,300
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About Mazomanie, WI

The land on which rests the town of Mazomanie fell within the hunting grounds of the Hočąk, or Winnebago, Indian nation. About a decade after the Winnebago cession of 1832, there were only a small number of white settlers in the area. What precipitated the birth of the town was the advent of the Milwaukee and Mississippi Railroad in 1855, which passed through the region to connect Milwaukee with La Crosse. The superintendent of the railroad, Edward Brodhead, gave the village its name; many years later, he explained its derivation: “He (Mazomanie) was an Indian chief in our state and was well known to the old gentleman, H.L. Dousman, who said the Indians pronounced it as though it was spelled Man-zo-ma-nie and the English of it is Iron Horse, which I adopted for the name of a railroad town and also for the name of my horse.” This distinguished chief was Mą́zamąnį́ga, "Iron Walker." The Hočągara, who have persisted in the area despite many attempts to eject them, call this town Mą́zamąnį́, dropping the suffix -ga (a definite article used to indicate a person's name).