Mustang Horses for Sale near San Jacinto, CA

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Mustang - Horse for Sale in Vista, CA 92084
Jewel
Jewel is off the Utah BLM and was professionally gentled there. I got her w..
Vista, California
Black
Mustang
Mare
17
Vista, CA
CA
$1,500
Mustang - Horse for Sale in Hesperia, CA 92344
Rocket
Rocket is a very easy horse to handle on the ground she ties leads picks up..
Hesperia, California
Grulla
Mustang
Mare
5
Hesperia, CA
CA
$1,000
Mustang - Horse for Sale in Wildomar, CA 92595
Mustang Gelding
This is Little Mister. He is a 14 hand, 21 year old, Mustang/Arabian geldin..
Wildomar, California
Gray
Mustang
Gelding
29
Wildomar, CA
CA
$1
Mustang Mare
I have a beautiful mustang mare 10 years old needs work under saddle. She ..
Temecula, California
Dun
Mustang
Mare
-
Temecula, CA
CA
$100
1

About San Jacinto, CA

The Luiseño were the original inhabitants of what later would be called the San Jacinto Valley, having many villages with residents. In their own language, these people called themselves Payomkowishum (also spelled "Payomkawichum"), meaning People of the West. They are a Native American people who at the time of the first contacts with the Spanish in the sixteenth century, inhabited the coastal area of southern California, ranging fifty miles from what now is the southern part of Los Angeles County, California to the northern part of contemporary San Diego County, California, and their settlements extended inland for thirty miles. [ citation needed ] The tribe was named Luiseño by the Spanish due to their proximity to the Mission San Luís Rey de Francia ("The Mission of Saint Louis King of France," known as the "King of the Missions"), which was founded on June 13, 1798 by Father Fermín Francisco de Lasuén, in what was the First Military District in what now is Oceanside, California, in northern San Diego County. [ citation needed ] The Anza Trail, one of the first European overland routes to California, named after Juan Bautista de Anza, 4 crossed the valley in the 1770s.