The first sighting in North America of Appaloosa horses by non-native Americans was recorded by Merriwether Lewis of
the famed Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1806.  However, the horse's roots  go back further, perhaps as far as 1400 B.C.  
Horses with spotted coats appeared in the art of the Egyptians, Greeks, and other ancient cultures.  Nomads in Central Asia
were believed to have possessed spotted horses around 100 B.C.  Later they were bred in Austria and Denmark.  Some
spotted horses were brought to Mexico by the Spanish in the 1500"s, and eventually the descendants of these horses
made  their way northward into the area of the Palouse River of northern Idaho and into the herds of the Nez Perce Indians.
The sturdy sure-footed equine with the unique
markings served the tribes with distinction. For
the Nez Perce these horses were more than just
transportation,  they were wealth, prestige and the
centerpiece of the economy of the tribe.

As conflicts between settlers and the Indians escalated, an
all out war was under way by 1877 between the Nez Perce
and the U.S. Cavalry. By the time Chief Joseph and his tribe
surrendered, after a trek of over 1,100 miles, only about
1,000 of their horses survived, among them the hardiest and
toughest of the spotted horses.

What happened next was definitely not the proudest or
most honorable moment in American military history.  Because
the Nez Perce had evaded capture for so long, the military
decided to neutralize their method of transportation to prevent
them from fleeing again.  Many of the spotted horses were
killed or sold to settlers who bred them without regard for
confirmation or preservation of their unique coloration.  The
carefully cultivated breed was nearly destroyed.

In the early 1900's remnants of this colored breed caught
the eye of horse lovers.   Settlers in the Pacific Northwest had
begun calling these horses "A Palouse" horse, that evolved
into "Palousey", "Appalousey" and other derivatives, and
finally the name APPALOOSA was selected for this distinctively
colored light stock horse breed.  In 1938 the breed
association known as the Appaloosa Horse Club was formed
by Claude Thompson, and headquartered in Moscow, Idaho.
More than 630,000 Appaloosas have been registered since
the founding of the ApHC and today it is common to find
specimens of the Appaloosa Breed in every horse related
endeavor.  They excel at working cattle, reining competition,
hunter/jumper events, and are used as endurance mounts
and trail horses.   The Appaloosa is an excellent versatile
family horse.  Currently, there are horses registered with the
ApHC that have pedigrees with 5 generations of Appaloosa
to Appaloosa breeding containing no out crossing to other
breeds thus preserving the bloodlines of the distinctive breed.
Members of the National Appaloosa Horse Club and the Tennessee State Regional Club are proud to carry on the
work of preserving and promoting the wonderful unique equine known as the
Appaloosa Horse.
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