Direct descendants of the Spanish
ship-wrecked ponies found on "Assateeg" Assateague early in the 16th
century
The story of how the ponies came to Chincoteague is stronger than
fiction. Perhaps it is too often taken for fiction. In collected
records from the very earliest history of the Island, one finds
information which leads to the following true story below:
Early in the 16th century a Spanish ship was wrecked off the coast
of Assateague, near a beach sand dune, and the then point of
Assateague beach from which the first grant mentioned. This was made
known to the white man by the Assateeg Indians, through signs and
gestures, (Indian language) that the shipwrecked men had been
transported to the mainland. This ship cargo was Spanish Mustang
horses. Those that escaped death from the wreckage swam ashore and
obtained freedom on the Island of Assateague (Assateeg).
At that early date Assateague was separated from Chincoteague by a
narrow waterway called a Gut, so narrow that a person or a horse
could jump across. Assateague being a barren sandy island with but
little grasses, and Chincoteague being wooded, is given for the
reason that the ponies came to Chincoteague for protection and
shelter from the lashing storms of the Atlantic and the bitter
winters. The snowdrifts often covered pines ten feet high.
The skeleton of this ship was seen by early settlers. To the foot of
this hill near the ocean, one can see part of a ship built with wooden
pegs, and in the early grants of the Island is found proof that the
ponies were here when the first four white men were transported to Assateague and Chincoteague. Over the long years the ponies
increased rapidly, until they became very meddlesome. Those who had
cleared parcels of land for corn and vegetables had to build high
fences to keep them out. These fences were made of split logs, and
some people called them worm fences. The ponies were wild and would
go in great herds, either push the fence down or jump very high
ones, especially if the corn was green. There was no stock law then.
The old ox was used to till the soil and not ponies.
Less than fifty years ago the ponies were solid colors, Bays,
Blacks, Sorrels. Occasionally, one would see a white hoof or a spot
in the forehead. Their manes were long and very heavy, sometimes
curly and silk and their tails touching the ground.
Their beauty attracted the visitors who would come to Chincoteague
to hunt or visit the early settlers. Then, the early
settlers began to round up many of these ponies on one particular day of
each year, around the beginning of the 17th Century. There was an
old saying that the ponies that grazed on marshland belonging to any
one man belonged to the owner.
Pony Penning, or round-up, was first held on the Southern end of
the Island, to the left of the cross-roads of Old Dominion Lodge and
the Beebe’s Ranch. This is the part of the Island that was
inhabited. The town was too far away from the ocean, and was too
sandy (People referred to our town as Sandy Bottom).
Although Pony Penning of that day would be a dull affair to us, it
was the only day of amusement the early citizens had.
Their Pony Penning was far different from that of today. Only the
men came to Pony Penning. The women prepared the food but were not
permitted to join in the fun. The men on the mainland were notified
weeks ahead of time. Most of them knew, for around the 10th of
August, or as near that date as possible, the round-up was held. As
there was no other way, the visitors came in all sorts of boats. The
food was free to all, so were the kegs of home-made whiskey.
The men who owned the ponies bet their ponies against the money of
the mainland men.
There were no saddles and they used a wicket or a rope for a bridle,
and they rode bareback. Most of the people who did the riding were
ex-slaves. The "colored" also did the roping and branding of the
ponies.
One of the direct descendants of these ponies is the beautiful famed
“Misty of Chincoteague”, now being trained for the movies by her
owner and author of the book, Mrs. Marguerite Henry.
The festival grew from year to year. In 1924, the Chincoteague
Volunteer Fire Company was organized, and they made Pony Penning Day
an annual affair. They set the last Thursday in July as Pony Penning
Day. This put the spotlight on the little pony, and people from all
parts of the United States have come to see the Pony Round-up on
Chincoteague.
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