Reining Horses for Sale near Bluefield, WV

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Paint Stallion
Beautiful blaze face and nice conformation, this horse has a lot of potent..
Mouth Of Wilson, Virginia
Red Dun
Paint
Stallion
-
Mouth Of Wilson, VA
VA
$600
Paint Mare
Beautiful, hard to find black and white overo. This horse had loads of pot..
Mouth Of Wilson, Virginia
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Mouth Of Wilson, VA
VA
Contact
Quarter Horse Mare
Peppy is an 11 year old mare, she is a proven broodmare. She has had 60 da..
Rural Retreat, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
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Rural Retreat, VA
VA
$3,000
Quarter Horse Mare
Nice, freindly AQHA filly, bloodlines of Doc O lena, King, Wimpy, Gold Bar..
Max Meadows, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Max Meadows, VA
VA
$600
Quarter Horse Stallion
"Java" is a very nice young stallion with an unbeatable pedigree. He has D..
Wytheville, Virginia
Sorrel
Quarter Horse
Stallion
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Wytheville, VA
VA
$350
Paint Stallion
"Dollar" is an outstanding stallion that tested homozygous for the tobiano..
Wytheville, Virginia
Paint
Stallion
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Wytheville, VA
VA
$350
Paint Stallion
rocket has exellent blood lines, is reg. to apha. has been handled sence bi..
Saltville, Virginia
Paint
Stallion
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Saltville, VA
VA
$2,500
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About Bluefield, WV

The European-American history of Bluefield began in the 18th century, when two families settled in a rugged and remote part of what is now southern West Virginia. Others joined them and they built a small village with a mill, a church, a one-room schoolhouse, and a fort for defending the settlement against invasions by the Shawnee Indian tribe, which had a village on the banks of the Bluestone River. In 1882, the descendants of the Davidson and Bailey family sold a portion of their land, when Captain John Fields of the Norfolk and Western Railway pioneered the area and began building a new railroad through the hills of Bluefield. The city is traditionally thought to be named after the chicory flowers in the area, which give the fields a purplish blue hue during the summer. Research has shown that this settlement, also known as Higginbotham's Summit in the 1880s, was probably named for the coal fields that were developed in the area of the Bluestone River.