Breeding Horses for Sale near Havelock, NC

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Jacksonville, NC 28540
LIL Tuff Dun It
“Lil Tuff Dun It” aka Taffy, 2008 AQHA 14.3 sorrel mare. Granddaughter of N..
Jacksonville, North Carolina
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
16
Jacksonville, NC
NC
Sold
Paint Mare
Ransom is broke to ride w / reining. In foal to DOUBLE homozygous Buckski..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$5,000
Paint Mare
Perfect Streak has been used primarily for a brood mare up untill I bought..
Jacksonville, North Carolina
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Jacksonville, NC
NC
$1,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Ernest Expressions, Has excellent bloodlines: Impressive granddaughter, top..
Gloucester, North Carolina
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Gloucester, NC
NC
$2,500
Andalusian Stallion
Ladino TG was sired by the beautiful black stallion Ebano VI (S / P) His da..
Gloucester, North Carolina
Bay
Andalusian
Stallion
-
Gloucester, NC
NC
$1,250
Miniature Stallion
BJ is a beautifully marked black and white pinto stallion. He is 34" and i..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Black
Miniature
Stallion
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$1,200
Paint Mare
This pretty little filly has two blue eyes. She has been handled since bir..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$1,100
Paint Mare
SOLD!SOLD!SOLD!This beautuful tobiano mare is in foal to BUCKEYE COLONEL, a..
Maple Hill, North Carolina
Palomino
Paint
Mare
-
Maple Hill, NC
NC
$2,600
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About Havelock, NC

Havelock is one of eight cities in the world named after Sir Henry Havelock, a British officer in India, who distinguished himself in 1857 during what was known as the Indian Mutiny. The area was originally named "Havelock Station" in the late 1850s, when the Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad built a depot where its right-of-way crossed what is now Miller Boulevard. The town was the initial landing point for a Civil War battle known as the Battle of New Bern. On March 11, 1862, Brigadier General Ambrose Burnside's command embarked from Roanoke Island to rendezvous with Union gunboats at Hatteras Inlet for an expedition against New Bern. On March 13, the fleet sailed up the Neuse River, anchored at Slocum Creek, and disembarked infantry on the river's south bank.