Appendix Horses for Sale near Burlington, WI

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Appendix Mare
Dutchess has been shown in halter and won. She has long toes which require..
Waterford, Wisconsin
Appendix
Mare
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Waterford, WI
WI
$1,500
Appendix Stallion
Good looking horse! Grey with black mane and tail. Clips, loads, ties. Per..
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Gray
Appendix
Stallion
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Kenosha, WI
WI
$3,000
Appendix Mare
Spice has great ground manners and loves attention from adults and kids ali..
Harvard, Illinois
Brown
Appendix
Mare
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Harvard, IL
IL
$500
Appendix Stallion
Reg. Quarter HOrse Gelding. He is 8 yr. old. Sky has lots of miles on the ..
Rockford, Illinois
Buckskin
Appendix
Stallion
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Rockford, IL
IL
$3,500
Appendix Stallion
Beautiful black gelding with white star & snip, loves people, nice mover, a..
North Prairie, Wisconsin
Black
Appendix
Stallion
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North Prairie, WI
WI
$4,500
Appendix Mare
Great mare just started in dressage does halfpasses at a trot and canter wi..
Crystal Lake, Illinois
Bay
Appendix
Mare
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Crystal Lake, IL
IL
Contact
Appendix Stallion
Registered 7 year old gelding. Good ground manners, trailers well. Could go..
Racine, Wisconsin
Bay
Appendix
Stallion
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Racine, WI
WI
$2,950
Appendix Mare
http: / / www. angelfire. com / d20 / lexiforsale /..
Crystal Lake, Illinois
Appendix
Mare
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Crystal Lake, IL
IL
$7,500
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About Burlington, WI

Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the area, Native American mounds were constructed near the present location of Burlington. For example, around 1830, a small Potawatomi village stood in what is now the Town of Burlington, though it wasn't larger than the present-day city. The earliest certain European presence in what is now Burlington was in the fall of 1799, when a group of French explorers and missionaries led by Francis Morgan de Vereceones made a portage from the Root River to the Fox River, reaching the Fox at approximately Burlington's present location. The first European settlers in Burlington were Moses Smith (the son of a Revolutionary War veteran) and William Whiting. Smith and Whiting had been in the area previously, making a so-called "jackknife claim" to the land (carving their names and the date on trees in the vicinity) on December 15, 1835.