Half Arabian Horses for Sale near Chapel Hill, NC

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Half Arabian Stallion
This horse was born to jump! "Slim" is a stunning 16 hand bay Arabian cros..
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Bay
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Chapel Hill, NC
NC
$5,000
Half Arabian Mare
Handled since birth (ties / loads / blankets) but does not have formal tra..
Angier, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Angier, NC
NC
$700
Half Arabian Stallion
Rob would make an excellent kids horse. Rob is for lease ONLY! He has bee..
Garner, North Carolina
Sorrel
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Garner, NC
NC
$60
Half Arabian Stallion
LEVI: 7 yo 14. 2 hh paint / Arabian gelding. Loves to jump - fun & forwar..
Pittsboro, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Pittsboro, NC
NC
$5,000
Half Arabian Stallion
fancy blue eyed cremello gelding. handled since birth. stands for farrier..
Zebulon, North Carolina
Cremello
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Zebulon, NC
NC
$2,000
Half Arabian Mare
Pretty bay mare, 5 yr old, can saddle and mount, but doesn't know what to d..
Sanford, North Carolina
Bay
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Sanford, NC
NC
$700
Half Arabian Mare
Grade Mare. Nice, full bodied with kind personality. Will jump 2'+, Nice f..
Wendell, North Carolina
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Wendell, NC
NC
$3,200
Half Arabian Mare
3 / 4 Arab - Aladdinn, Kaset direct bloodlines. 1 / 4 SB - - Easter Symbol ..
Raleigh, North Carolina
Black
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Raleigh, NC
NC
Contact
Half Arabian Mare
RF Rosalita de Gomez is a very elegant 15. 1h, 4 year old, chestnut 1 / 2 A..
Durham, North Carolina
Chestnut
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Durham, NC
NC
$3,500
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About Chapel Hill, NC

The area was the home place of early settler William Barbee of Middlesex County, Virginia, whose 1753 grant of 585 acres from John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville was the first of two land grants in what is now the Chapel Hill-Durham area. Though William Barbee died shortly after settling there, one of his eight children, Christopher Barbee, became an important contributor to his father's adopted community and to the fledgling University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill has developed along a hill; the crest was the original site of a small Anglican " chapel of ease", built in 1752, known as New Hope Chapel. The Carolina Inn now occupies this site. In 1819, the town was founded to serve the University of North Carolina and developed around it.