Show Horses for Sale near Hudson, IL

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Paint Stallion
This gentle guy should mature to 15. 1 hands or better. Thor Oughly Amos i..
Granville, Illinois
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Granville, IL
IL
$1,250
Paint Stallion
This guy will get you noticed in the show pen! Thors King of Spades is APH..
Granville, Illinois
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Granville, IL
IL
$1,250
Draft Stallion
Flaxen mane / tail. Quick learner, eager to try new things. Drives single..
Waynesville, Illinois
Sorrel
Draft
Stallion
-
Waynesville, IL
IL
$9,500
Tennessee Walking Mare
Registered Tennessee Walking Horse. Professional training and has been sh..
Princeville, Illinois
Sorrel
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Princeville, IL
IL
$3,000
Miniature Mare
She has a beautiful dished head and a lot of trot! Excellent Show Prospect..
Morton, Illinois
Pinto
Miniature
Mare
-
Morton, IL
IL
$2,000
Miniature Stallion
This is an exceptional colt with lots of show attitude! His sire was a Nat..
Morton, Illinois
Gray
Miniature
Stallion
-
Morton, IL
IL
$2,500
Half Arabian Mare
8 year old grey / white double registered Pinto mare, ESP AA - a. k. a. Coo..
Dunlap, Illinois
Pinto
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Dunlap, IL
IL
$15,000
Paint Mare
This is the perfect horse for someone that wants to show. She is built to s..
Magnolia, Illinois
Paint
Mare
-
Magnolia, IL
IL
$2,000
Paint Mare
4 yr old AB informative Sorrel / Tob. Mare. Great mover!!! Easy to work w ..
Clinton, Illinois
Paint
Mare
-
Clinton, IL
IL
$8,000
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About Hudson, IL

Hudson, Illinois was laid out by Horatio Petit on August 13, 1836. It was one of eight towns founded in McLean County during the great real estate boom that swept through central Illinois between 1835 and 1837. It also shares the distinction of being one of two "colonial" settlements in the county; the other was the Rhode Island colony in the southwestern part of the county. Traditional Sources say that the town was named for the town of Hudson, New York in Columbia County which, so it was said, was the home of its early settlers. However, in her Book on the Hudson, Ruth Biting Hamm has pointed out that, while some settlers were from Queens County, New York, none came from near the town of Hudson.