Paint Horses for Sale near Jonesboro, LA

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Paint - Horse for Sale in Calhoun, LA 71225
Butters
Hustlin the Scotch aka"Butters", is a 12 yr old 16.1 h tall regis..
Calhoun, Louisiana
Pinto
Paint
Gelding
14
Calhoun, LA
LA
$3,800
Paint Stallion
He is a Beauty. Stud fee is $200. 00 for nonregistered mares and $300. 00 ..
Verda, Louisiana
Paint
Stallion
-
Verda, LA
LA
$200
Paint Mare
Pearl is a beautiful, dappled buckskin mare. She has been competed on in ..
Minden, Louisiana
Buckskin
Paint
Mare
-
Minden, LA
LA
$2,500
Paint Mare
Good horse for any age rider. Gentle and easy to handle. Stays calm in abou..
Columbia, Louisiana
Paint
Mare
-
Columbia, LA
LA
$2,250
Paint Stallion
Bay and white tobiano stallion. Mulatescochonville has been roped off of an..
Minden, Louisiana
Black Overo
Paint
Stallion
-
Minden, LA
LA
$7,500
Paint Stallion
SOLD Here is your all around horse. 2 / 3d barrel horse. very consistant...
West Monroe, Louisiana
Chestnut
Paint
Stallion
-
West Monroe, LA
LA
$5,200
Paint Stallion
This is an unbelievable colt!He has the loud color, the confirmation and th..
West Monroe, Louisiana
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
West Monroe, LA
LA
$3,000
Paint Mare
"Velvet" is a 15-2 hand, AB informative mare that has produced two homozygo..
Ruston, Louisiana
Brown
Paint
Mare
-
Ruston, LA
LA
$6,500
Paint Mare
Yearling filly . One of the last daughters of California Skip CHAMPION AND ..
Athens, Louisiana
Sorrel
Paint
Mare
-
Athens, LA
LA
$3,500
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About Jonesboro, LA

Founded on January 10, 1860, by Joseph Jones and his wife, Sarah Pankey Jones, as a small family farm, Jonesboro is now a small industrial mill town. Originally founded as "Macedonia," the name of the small town changed to Jonesboro on January 16, 1901, after the United States Post Office Department approved the change and became the seat of government for Jackson Parish on March 15, 1911, following a parish-wide referendum. Jonesboro remains agricultural, industrial, economic, and governmental center of the parish. During the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, whites violently resisted African-American efforts to gain their constitutional rights as citizens, even after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Ku Klux Klan, which was active in the area, conducted what was called a "reign of terror" in 1964, including harassment of activists, "the burning of crosses on the lawns of African-American voters," murder, and destroying five black churches by fire, as well as their Masonic hall, and a Baptist center.