Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Miami Gardens, FL

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Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Homestead, FL 33032
Tennessee Walking Mare
Contact Ulises (786) 326 9233 Type: Tennessee Walking Color: Tobiano Sex: M..
Homestead, Florida
Tobiano
Tennessee Walking
Mare
12
Homestead, FL
FL
$2,500
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Homestead, FL 33032
Tennessee Walking Mare
Type: Tennessee Walking/Racking Horse Color: Black/Dark Brown Sex: Mare Hei..
Homestead, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Mare
24
Homestead, FL
FL
$1,500
Buddy
Looking for a sweet mare or gelding that is about 16 or so hands for trail ..
Miami, Florida
Palomino
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
17
Miami, FL
FL
$2,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Excellent trail horse. will lead or follow. up to date on shots and coggin..
Lake Worth, Florida
Black
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Lake Worth, FL
FL
$2,000
Tennessee Walking Stallion
"Davey" has 5 World Grand Champions on his papers including Pusher's Secre..
Davie, Florida
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Davie, FL
FL
$3,500
Tennessee Walking Stallion
Imprinted at birth and very gentle. Professionally started. Although rarel..
Wellington, Florida
Palomino
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Wellington, FL
FL
$3,800
1

About Miami Gardens, FL

In the wake of the construction of I-95 in the late 1960s, many middle- and upper-income African American and West Indian American families migrated from Miami neighborhoods like Liberty City to what became Miami Gardens (also called Carol City , Norland or Norwood) as race-based covenants were outlawed with the Fair Housing Act, and mostly lower income blacks moved into the Liberty City and Little Haiti neighborhoods surrounding Liberty Square and Edison Courts. Miami Gardens was incorporated on May 13, 2003. The city's neighborhoods of Andover, Bunche Park, Carol City, Lake Lucerne, Norland, Opa-locka North, and Scott Lake were previously unincorporated areas within Miami-Dade County. In 2007, Mayor Shirley Gibson said that the city would no longer allow any low-income housing developments; many residents blamed the developments for spreading crime and recreational drugs throughout the city. Around that time, the city's tax revenues dropped to the third-lowest in Miami-Dade County.