Tennessee Walking Horses for Sale near Alexandria, LA

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Whi
i want for it $450.000..
Glenmora, Louisiana
Buckskin
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
6
Glenmora, LA
LA
$450
Tennessee Walking Stallion
3 yr old black / white tobiano TWHBEA registered stud. Grandsire on dam's s..
Rock Hill, Louisiana
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Rock Hill, LA
LA
Contact
Tennessee Walking Mare
DR's Dixie Belle and her filly Dixie Belle's Princess are for sale as a pai..
Rock Hill, Louisiana
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Rock Hill, LA
LA
Contact
Tennessee Walking Mare
A flashy black / white tobiano TWHBEA registered yearling filly with excell..
Rock Hill, Louisiana
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Rock Hill, LA
LA
Contact
Tennessee Walking Stallion
TWHBEA registered. Eligible for double registration as Spotted Walking Hors..
Rock Hill, Louisiana
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Stallion
-
Rock Hill, LA
LA
Contact
Tennessee Walking Mare
9 yr old TWHBEA registered broodmare that is currently heavily in foal to S..
Rock Hill, Louisiana
Black Overo
Tennessee Walking
Mare
-
Rock Hill, LA
LA
Contact
1

About Alexandria, LA

Located along the Red River, the city of Alexandria was originally home to a community which supported activities of the adjacent French trader outpost of Post du Rapides. The area developed as an assemblage of traders, Caddo people, and merchants in the agricultural lands bordering the mostly unsettled areas to the north and providing a link from the south to the El Camino Real and then larger settlement of Natchitoches, the oldest permanent settlement in the Louisiana Purchase. Alexander Fulton, a businessman from Washington County, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, received a land grant from Spain in 1785, and the first organized settlement was made at some point in the 1790s. In 1805, Fulton and business partner Thomas Harris Maddox laid out the town plan and named the town in Fulton's honor. The earliest deed that survives for an Alexandria resident is from June 24, 1805, when a William Cochren, who identifies himself as "of the Town of Alexandria", sold a tract of land across the Red River to a William Murrey.