Breeding Horses for Sale near Danville, VA

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Paint Mare
Rose is an extremely striking blaze faced jenny with a month old gray fema..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Paint
Mare
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
Contact
Paint Mare
Alibi is a beautiful 15. 1 hand, 5 yr. old registered APHA mare. Currentl..
Madison, North Carolina
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Madison, NC
NC
$3,500
Thoroughbred Mare
Slew Feliou is a Jockey Club registered German Oldenburg Verband Main Mare..
Danville, Virginia
Bay
Thoroughbred
Mare
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Danville, VA
VA
$3,000
Hanoverian Mare
Blue Moon is by the Elite Stallion Bordeaux, the leading producer of US Ha..
Timberlake, North Carolina
Chestnut
Hanoverian
Mare
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Timberlake, NC
NC
$10,000
Arabian Mare
Kiri BF (AHA pending) (Abraxas Halimaar X W Kriskam (WJ Sam) ) This gorgeou..
Mebane, North Carolina
Gray
Arabian
Mare
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Mebane, NC
NC
$6,500
Appaloosa Mare
Mare foaled April 23, 2004 to a loud blanket colt, and has been bred back t..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Sorrel
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
$3,500
Appaloosa Stallion
To finish 16 hh, this is a loud if not unusual marked Appaloosa Stud Colt, ..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Bay Roan
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
$5,000
Appaloosa Mare
Cutting down on stock Jill is a calm mare, she just foaled a colorful filly..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Black
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
$3,500
Appaloosa Mare
Her barn name is Honey, she is a deep Honey Roan mare. Now in Foal to deliv..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Roan
Appaloosa
Mare
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
$3,000
Arabian Mare
started under saddle. handled since birth. excellent confirmation and gorge..
Rougemont, North Carolina
Bay
Arabian
Mare
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Rougemont, NC
NC
$2,500
Appaloosa Stallion
Loud in color, great breeding, show, prospect. 5 months old, going on 6 mon..
Walnut Cove, North Carolina
Appaloosa
Stallion
-
Walnut Cove, NC
NC
$2,500
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About Danville, VA

Numerous Native American tribes had lived in this part of the Piedmont region since prehistoric times. During the colonial period, the area was inhabited by Siouan language-speaking tribes. In 1728, English colonist William Byrd headed an expedition sent to determine the true boundary between Virginia and North Carolina. Late that summer, the party camped upstream from what is now Danville. Byrd was so taken with the beauty of the land, that he prophesied a future settlement in the vicinity, where people would live "with much comfort and gaiety of Heart." He named the river along which they camped as the " Dan", for Byrd felt he had wandered " From Dan to Beersheba." After the American Revolutionary War, the first settlement developed in 1792 downstream from Byrd's campsite, at a spot along the river shallow enough to allow fording.