All-Around Horses for Sale near Spanish Fork, UT

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Morgan - Horse for Sale in Spanish Fork, UT 84660
Jaggers
JAGGERS IS SOLD. We sell 1-3 horses each year trained just like him. Contac..
Spanish Fork, Utah
Palomino
Morgan
Gelding
15
Spanish Fork, UT
UT
Contact
Rocky Mountain - Horse for Sale in Spanish Fork, UT 84660
Angel
SOLD, BUT WE HAVE OTHERS - We train 1-3 horses like Angel every year or so...
Spanish Fork, Utah
Silver Dapple
Rocky Mountain
Mare
9
Spanish Fork, UT
UT
Contact
Pinto Stallion
scottie is a yearling half arab overo colt with flex main ant tail hes got..
Riverton, Utah
Chestnut
Pinto
Stallion
-
Riverton, UT
UT
$1,800
Paint Stallion
This gelding is bred to work cows. Grand Sire is Peppy San Badger, Great ..
Bluffdale, Utah
Red Dun
Paint
Stallion
-
Bluffdale, UT
UT
$2,500
Paint Mare
Slicks Color Prints is a bay Tobiano Homozygous filly with a disposition th..
Payson, Utah
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Payson, UT
UT
$2,500
Paint Mare
Splash of Comet is gentle and kind. Excellent Reining Futurity prospect. An..
Payson, Utah
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Payson, UT
UT
$1,500
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About Spanish Fork, UT

Spanish Fork was settled in 1851 by members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as part of the Mormon Pioneers' settlement of Utah Territory. Its name derives from a visit to the area by two Franciscan friars from Spain, Silvestre Vélez de Escalante and Francisco Atanasio Domínguez in 1776, who followed the stream down Spanish Fork canyon with the objective of opening a new trail from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Spanish missions in California, along a route later followed by fur trappers. [ citation needed ] They described the area inhabited by Native Americans as having "spreading meadows, where there is sufficient irrigable land for two good settlements. Over and above these finest of advantages, it has plenty of firewood and timber in the adjacent sierra which surrounds its many sheltered spots, waters, and pasturages, for raising cattle and sheep and horses." [ citation needed ] In 1851, some settlers led by William Pace set up scattered farms in the Spanish Fork bottom lands and called the area the Upper Settlement. However, a larger group congregated at what became known as the Lower Settlement just over a mile northwest of the present center of Spanish Fork along the Spanish Fork River.