English Pleasure Horses for Sale near Livermore, CA

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Crossbred Pony - Horse for Sale in Stockton, CA 95207
Sugar Bear
Sugar Bear is a gorgeous and super sweet Gypsy/Haflinger large pony standin..
Stockton, California
Palomino
Crossbred Pony
Mare
14
Stockton, CA
CA
$9,500
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Morgan Hill, CA 95037
Quarter Horse Mare
This is the sweetest mare you've ever met. Cassie can show english one day ..
Morgan Hill, California
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
16
Morgan Hill, CA
CA
$10,000
Kolo
Kolo is a retired thoroughbred race horse and jumper who has been a lesson ..
Soquel, California
Bay
Thoroughbred
Gelding
21
Soquel, CA
CA
$6,500
Thoroughbred Stallion
Cash is a sweet horse, and still has a lot left in him, despite his 20- or..
Castro Valley, California
Bay
Thoroughbred
Stallion
-
Castro Valley, CA
CA
$900
Paint Stallion
Has been shown by a youth in western pleasure, trail ridden, taken team pe..
Oakley, California
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Oakley, CA
CA
$4,000
Friesian Stallion
Are you looking for a really TALL Friesian?, Andrew from Wildwind, Andrew ..
Pleasanton, California
Black
Friesian
Stallion
-
Pleasanton, CA
CA
$22,500
Quarter Horse Mare
Breeze is a 9 year old palomino mare who will work well for anyone. She cu..
San Rafael, California
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
San Rafael, CA
CA
$7,500
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About Livermore, CA

Before its incorporation in 1796 under the Franciscan Mission San Jose, located in what is now the southern part of Fremont, the Livermore area was home to some of the Ohlone (or Costanoan) native people. Each mission had two to three friars and a contingent of up to five soldiers to help keep order in the mission and to help control the natives. Like most indigenous people in California, the natives in the vicinity of Mission San Jose were mostly coerced into joining it, where they were taught Spanish, the Catholic religion, singing, construction, agricultural trades and herding—the Native Californian people originally had no agriculture and no domestic animals except dogs. Other tribes were coerced into other adjacent missions. The Mission Indians were restricted to the mission grounds where they lived in sexually segregated "barracks" that they built themselves with padre instruction.