HISTORY OF CAPE HENLOPEN
AND BEYOND
ASSATEASGUE &
CHINCOTEAGUE
AN ABUNDANCE OF WILD
PONY'S
Wild ponies are abundant
on either island. Take a half hour walk from the Atlantic
Hotel
and there will be at
least a hundred of them . In 1873 it is known they have been
here
many decades. How they
got here is not really known.
The best story, a Virginia
Gentleman was bringing a dozen or so English Pony's to the
State of Virginia and
his ship capsized on Assateague , the ponies survived and swam
ashore, and soon there was a herd. During the 1700's they were
considered of no value
and there are no record
that any land owners ever set claim to them. Then when the herdsmen
became land owners,
ponies on their lands were marked, tamed to ride and pull carts and
such. Many were tamed and
sold to the mainland farmers, in 1840 they were sold for $30.
Early herds of wild ponies
lost many due to the fact all ponies were not fit to survive the
harsh coastal winters
and either starved, froze to death or drown in the marshes at high
tides.
The male ponies were always
at war with one another and the strongest conquered was the
herds leader. During the
northeasters the herds gathered together, face southwest, stand
motionless until the storm
moved on.
Whatever, the ancestors,
these pony's are handsome as any thoroughbred and look like
diminutive horses. They
do not have characteristic of a Shetland breed.
This year there are near
500 ponies which have divided themselves into herds without regard
of ownership and each
herd confines itself to it's own range and is governed by
a
male with supreme
authority , sort of an equine autocrat.
Male's are sold as they
become four years of age, the mares, which are neater and more
docile are seldom sold.,
but kept on the island be be a mother ten or more times. A money
make to the owner of a
free gold mine.
Ponies are more happy in
summer, wild grass to eat, a bath in the sea waters to keep flies
and such off. In a harsh and snow filled winter they get pretty
lean.
Then in August there's “
the penning “. Most ponies are marked on the left hip for
ownership
identification and penning
is wh ere this is done. The ponies are herded by riders, made to
cross the sound, to the 'pen' at the hotel in mid town
Chincoteague. This penning is about all the attention a pony gets
from it owner until they a penned and sold when old
enough to break and
conquered and are then gentle.
Abstract: The Democratic
Advocate, Westminster, Maryland, Saturday, August 23, 1873
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