Horses for Sale near Idaho Falls, ID

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Pony - Horse for Sale in Rigby, ID 83442
Huckleberry
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY.COM ENDS ON 10/9 @ 5:40 PM CT. More information..
Rigby, Idaho
Blue Roan
Pony
Mare
11
Rigby, ID
ID
Contact
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Pocatello, ID 83202
Lynx
Lynx is a 14yr old mare that has done everything from gathering cows and br..
Pocatello, Idaho
Red Roan
Quarter Horse
Mare
19
Pocatello, ID
ID
Sold
Paint - Horse for Sale in Swan Valley, ID 83449
Harley
Harley just turned 11 - registered paint - he is not quite 15 hands tall , ..
Swan Valley, Idaho
Piebald
Paint
Gelding
11
Swan Valley, ID
ID
$5,900
Half Arabian - Horse for Sale in Rigby, ID 83442
Shade
She's an amazing horse, unfortunately I did outgrow her. She's a beginner/i..
Rigby, Idaho
Gray
Half Arabian
Mare
16
Rigby, ID
ID
$1,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Blackfoot, ID 83221
Mardy
We got two geldings that will be available through the Anderson Livestock A..
Blackfoot, Idaho
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Gelding
9
Blackfoot, ID
ID
$6,500
Friesian - Horse for Sale in Tetonia, ID 83452
Kelly
Mary is a beautiful black mare, very easy to ride, safe and bombproof for e..
Tetonia, Idaho
Black
Friesian
Mare
7
Tetonia, ID
ID
$4,500
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Shelley, ID 83274
Elvis
Grade Quarter Horse: Elvis is a 15.3 hand 16 year old quarter horse. Broke,..
Shelley, Idaho
Blue Grulla
Quarter Horse
Gelding
16
Shelley, ID
ID
$3,000

About Idaho Falls, ID

The area around Idaho Falls was first sparsely settled by cattle and sheep ranchers, but no significant development took place until 1864, when a man named Harry Rickets built and operated a ferry on the Snake River at 43°36.112′N 112°3.528′W  /  43.601867°N 112.058800°W  / 43.601867; -112.058800 . The ferry served a new tide of westward migration and travel on the Montana Trail following the Bear River Massacre of Shoshone Indians in 1863. The present-day site of Idaho Falls became a permanent settlement when freighter Matt Taylor built a timber-frame toll bridge across a narrow black basaltic gorge of the river 7 miles (11 km) downstream from the ferry. The bridge improved travel for settlers moving north and west, and for miners, freighters, and others seeking riches in the gold fields of Idaho and Montana—especially the boom towns of Bannack and Virginia City. By the end of 1865, a private bank, small hotel, livery stable, eating house, post office, and stage station had sprung up near the bridge.