Monday, July 3 OPS Museum tour, 1 p.m. Jolly Roger: David Pollard, 6 pm Community Square: Old-fashioned Square Dance, 6 to 8 p.m.
NPS Docks, Music by deejay Tommy Hutcherson , 8 to 9:15 p.m. NPS Docks: Fireworks, 9:15 p.m. Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Aaron & Jackie, 7:10 pm
Deepwater Theater: No show; enjoy the fireworks!
Gaffer’s: Psylo Joe, 9 pm
Tuesday, July 4 All around the village: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. July 4 events. See complete schedulehere . Jolly Roger: Aaron Caswell & Jackie Willis, 6 pm
Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Patrick Fuller, 7:10 pm
Gaffer’s: Texas Hold ‘Em Poker, 7 pm
Gaffer’s: Psylo Joe, 9 pm
Wednesday, July 5 OPS Museum, Kids Create-A-Craft, 1 p.m.
Down Creek Gallery: Opening reception for islander Robert Chestnut. 5 to 8 p.m. Jolly Roger: Edgar Scrubbs, 6 pm
Dajio Restaurant: Jon Lea, 7 pm
Coyote Music Den: Coyote Plus One–David Pollard. 8 pm, doors open at 7:30 pm
Deepwater Theater: The Dingbatter’s Guide to Ocracoke, 8 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Karaoke, 9 pm
Gaffer’s: Capt Jackie and the All-Stars, 9 pm
Thursday, July 6 Used Book Sale, Ocracoke Community Library, Back Road. Starts at 9 a.m., July 6,
Jolly Roger: David Pollard, 6 pm
Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Martin Garrish & Lou Castro, 3 pm Dajio Restaurant: Raygun Ruby, 80s music, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Kate McNally, 7:10 pm Deepwater Theater: Molasses Creek band, 8 pm Gaffer’s: Capt Jackie & the All-Stars, 9 pm
Friday, July 7
OPS Museum tour, 1 p.m. Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Will Roberts, Ventura Highway, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Barefoot Wade, 7:10 pm Coyote Music Den: Playing your Ocracoke Memories, Martin Garrish, 8 pm, doors open at 7:30 pm Gaffer’s: Zach Deputy, 9 pm
Saturday, July 8 Jolly Roger: Willis Gupton, 6 pm Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Martin Garrish & Lou Castro, 7 pm Dajio Restaurant: Kate McNally, 7 pm
Fiesta Latina Community Dance, 9 p.m. Community Center Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Broughton, 7:10 pm Gaffer’s: Zach Deputy, 9 pm
Sunday, July 9 Ocracoke Oyster Co.: Will Roberts, Ventura Highway, 7 pm Ocracoke Bar & Grille: Broughton, 7:10 pm Gaffer’s: Villa*Nova, 9 pm
To read about how the Independence Day was celebrated on the during WWI, click here.
Ocracoke Island will celebrate Independence Day over two days–today and tomorrow–sponsored by the Ocracoke Civic and Business Assn. Inc. and Hyde County.
An old-fashioned square dance from 6 to 8 p.m. followed by fireworks at 9:15 p.m. kick off the celebration tonight (July 3), and on Tuesday, July 4, an array of activities will take place throughout the village.
Below is the schedule.
Monday, July 3:
6 to 8 p.m.: TRADITIONAL ISLAND SQUARE DANCE At Community Square. Music by Molasses Creek; Philip Howard will be the square dance caller.
8 to 9:15 pm: GATHERING AT THE NPS DOCKS Dance tunes and patriotic songs spun by a local deejay
9:15 p.m.: FIREWORKS Launched from the NPS parking lot. Gather at the NPS docks and around Silver Lake Harbor.
Tuesday, July 4:
Square dancing will be held in Community Square from 6 to 8 p.m. July 3.
8 to 10 a.m.:MEET JOBELLE, Born May 7, Jobelle is the newest member of Ocracoke’s wild pony herd at the NPS Pony Pens
9 a.m.: FLAG RAISING CEREMONY and SINGING OF NATIONAL ANTHEM Led by Ocracoke Boy Scout Troop # 290. Ocracoke School flag circle on School Road
9:30 a.m. to Noon: 39th ANNUAL SAND SCULPTURE CONTEST
One of several sand sculptures at the Lifeguard Beach in the 2016 Independence day holiday celebration. Photo: C. Leinbach
At the NPS Lifeguard Beach. Peoples’ choice awards.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: CLASSIC CAR SHOW Pony Island Motel lawn. Sponsored by Jimmy’s Garage.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: OCRACOKE LIGHTHOUSE The lighthouse will be open for viewing. All are welcome to see inside.
4 p.m.: OLD TIME OCRACOKE PARADE All are welcome to enter. Cash prizes. Entrants should register by July 2, by emailing a photo of the entry form to info@ocracokevillage.com. Pick up your parade entry number between 1 and 4 p.m. on July 4 at Ocracoke Station. Entry forms available at the Post Office, or request a form from info@ocracokevillage.com.
Parade route starts at Ocracoke Oyster Company and ends at NPS Parking Lot.
6 p.m.: STORYTELLING WITH DONALD DAVIS On the lawn at Books to Be Red; bring your own chair or blanket
7 p.m.: NATIONAL ANTHEM AND AWARDS PRESENTATION Winners announced for Parade and Sand Sculpture Contest. Books to Be Red lawn
EVENING CELEBRATION Ocracoke Day Use Area/Lifeguard Beach 7 to 10 p.m.: COMMUNITY BEACH FIRE Bring your beach blanket, chair, and marshmallows to roast. OCBA will provide a beach fire for all to enjoy.
A community beach bonfire concludes the festivities from 7 to 10 p.m. July 4 at the Lifeguard Beach. Photo: C. Leinbach
Editor’s note: The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917, during World War I. The year before, amidst much talk that the U.S. would enter “the war to end all wars,” throughout the country communities prepared, including Ocracoke. The Independence Day celebration of 1916 reflected those times and a news article from then is reprinted. See below for the identification of the West Point cadet from Ocracoke.
The first official 4th of July celebration on Ocracoke occurred a few years earlier. To read about that event, click here.
The Wilmington Morning Star Wilmington, North Carolina Mon, Jun 5, 1916 – Page 7
Ocracoke To Celebrate Demonstration of Preparedness to be Given on July 4th (Special Star Correspondence).
Ocracoke, N.C., June 4. –With a lot of capable seamen ready to aid their country should it call, Ocracoke is anxiously awaiting the Fourth of July to demonstrate the fact. A unique preparedness parade will be held here then. It will be aquatic. There are no streets in the village or on the island over which a land pageant might be conducted. There is no National Guard organization; the only soldier that Ocracoke has sent out ′is a West Point cadet. Everyone nearly has been to sea. All except a half dozen or so of the two or three hundred voters depend on that element for a livelihood. Every boat in the place and scored from other places will participate in the preparedness parade on water and a regatta. Many residents are former man-o-warsmen. The village has its fair contingent in the service now. A score of the new semi-military coast guard will participate.
According to Philip Howard, the West Point cadet was Major General Ira Thomas Wyche (1887-1981) He notes in his Village Craftsmen Island Newsletterthe following:
Upon graduation from high school Ira enrolled at the United States Military Academy at West Point. The Laurenburg School was so highly respected that a certificate of graduation from Quackenbush exempted Ira from taking an entrance examination. He graduated from the Academy June 13, 1911, and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 13th Infantry.
Over the next three and a half decades Ira Wyche’s career advanced steadily. During World War I he served with the American Expeditionary Force in France. In June of 1941 he assumed command of the 79th Division.
In June of 1944 the 79th Division landed on Utah Beach in Normandy. General Wyche led his troops, often in fierce combat, across Europe and into Germany. During this time General Wyche worked closely with Field Marshall Montgomery, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, and Patton. The 79th was occupying Essen when Germany surrendered. At his retirement, in 1948, Wyche held the permanent rank of Major General, privileged to wear the two star insignia.
During his service, in addition to campaign ribbons, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star with two oak leaf clusters, the Army Commendation Ribbon and the French Order of the Legion of Honor, grade of Officer, Croiz-de-Guerre Avec Palm.
For more detailed information about General Wyche’s career see the bulleted highlights at the end of thisarticle.
Vivian “Vickie” Hovis Cobb. Photo by Candice Cobb.
The island was saddened to learn of the passing of the proprietor of the former “Cobb House” women’s boarding house on Ocracoke, Vivian “Vickie” H. Cobb, 88, of Hillsborough and Ocracoke, who died peacefully on June 29 in Duke Hospital.
Born Nov. 15, 1928, she was the only child born to the late Horace Osborne and Ferrie Elizabeth Johnson Hovis in Charlotte.
Vickie attended Erskine College in Due West, S.C., and Queens College in Charlotte, graduating with honors inclassical music in 1951.
She became the first organist for Memorial Methodist Church and began teaching piano in her parents’ Parkwood Avenue home.
Her Charlotte organist and teaching careers spanned five decades. In 1999, she relocated to Hillsborough, where she continued teaching until her 2013 retirement.
She met her future husband, artist Donald Cobb, on a blind date while he was stationed at Fort Jackson, S.C., during the Korean War. The couple wed and had a daughter, Candice, in 1957.
A few years later, Vickie and Don were stranded in a storm on North Carolina’s remote Outer Banks. They fell in love with Ocracoke, and decided to build a house and art studio in Oyster Creek there. In the early 1970s, Don realized a lifelong dream and opened his art studio to the public.
After Don’s untimely death in 1977, Vickie opened the Cobb House, a popular boarding house for college students summering on Ocracoke. The Cobb House thrived for 35 years thanks to Vickie’s sense of humor and easygoing style. House rules included, “no kegs on the porch” (unless they wash up in a storm), “date according to need” (if house needs repairs, find matching skills), and “early curfews” (LEAVE the house so Vickie can sleep). Many Cobb House alumni live on Ocracoke today, and regularly reminisce about their Cobb House misadventures.
Vickie Cobb enjoys the July 4, 2016, parade with Cobb House alumnae, from left, Allison O’Neal, Claudia Lewis and Jennifer Daniels. Photo: C. Leinbach
Vickie’s favorite pastimes included playing and listening to classical music, reading biographies, spending time with her favorite cat, “Mozart,” and walking the Ocracoke beach. She loved her students and younger friends, and frequently commented that she “didn’t like old people.” Her quick wit and straightforward approach to life were infectious, and her best times were spent laughing on Ocracoke with Cobb House girls and her BFF Phyllis Wall.
Her father, a career employee of Scott Drug Company, served as the family cook and neighborhood air raid warden during WWII. Her mother worked for Belk’s Department Store and enjoyed traveling the world in retirement.
Vickie is survived by her daughter, Candice, and partner, Martha McMillan, of Hillsborough and Ocracoke; cousins Lucille McCorkle, Jean Spurrier, Terry McCorkle Elder, and David McCorkle of Charlotte; Mozart, the big fine cat; and a very long list of friends, animals, and extended family.
A Hillsborough memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday, July 10, in St. Matthews Episcopal Church with a reception afterwards, and an Ocracoke funeral service will be 11 a.m. Thursday, July 13, in the Ocracoke United Methodist Church followed by lunch in the rec hall. Burial will be in the Ocracoke Community Cemetery.
Memorial donations may be made to the Ocracoke Community Square Revitalization Project (ocracokefoundation.org).
The family would like to thank The Pavilion at Croasdaile, Brookdale Meadowmont, and Hospice of Alamance-Caswell for their care and kindness.
New release from the National Park Service June 29, 2017
Over the last two to three months, a large sandbar has formed off Cape Hatteras National Seashore in the Cape Point area.
Due to the number of recent water rescues the Hatteras Island Rescue Squad has made between the tip of Cape Point and the sandbar, the National Park Service and Dare County urge all park visitors to use caution when attempting to access the offshore sandbar.
The Cape Point area is a highly dynamic location that is constantly changing through both erosion and accretion of sand.
Currents between Cape Point and offshore sandbars can be very strong. Therefore, the Seashore does not recommend that visitors swim or wade to these areas.
The life guarded beaches at Coquina Beach, Hatteras Lighthouse Beach and the Ocracoke Day Use Area Beach are excellent choices for swimming, especially when conditions bring dangerous rip currents to the area.
If interested in accessing the new sandbar, Seashore Superintendent David Hallac states that, “traveling to the sandbar is best accomplished by experienced kayakers or paddle boarders that are using appropriate flotation and mindful of the tides and strong currents in the area.”
Editor’s note: This story has been updated since first publication
By Peter Vankevich
Many visitors to the island wish they could live and work here.
Jeff Schleicher is one of those people and is happy to have had the opportunity to have done so for the past six years.
A graduate of Ohio State, prior to coming to Ocracoke, he taught at E.C. Glass High School in Lynchburg, Va. for 20 years and retired. His career also includes working in the nuclear energy industry for 10 years for Babcock & Wilcox Nuclear Operations Group, maintaining nuclear and steam generators. During that time, he worked throughout the country and abroad.
After his retirement, he didn’t expect to teach again.
But one day, while sitting at Ocracoke Coffee with his family in 2010, he learned the school was looking for an industrial arts teacher.
“My daughter-in-law told me to at least go over to the school across the street and check it out,” he said.
He did and met the school principal, Walt Padgett, who gave him the hard sell, and soon he was back in the classroom.
Schleicher was pleased to pass on his knowledge to island students—both boys and girls.
“Since there is not much industry on the island, our goal was to teach students skills they can use here when they graduate, as well as taking jobs on the mainland,” he said.
So, he taught his eager students all he knew, allowing them to take the lead and build all kinds of things that interested them and projects suggested by the community, including a new shell boat for the Pirates Chest, signs, jig-sawed pieces, even replicas of the lighthouse.
Schleicher encouraged the students to do what interests them.
“The favorite thing I made was a metal bumper,” noted Grant Jackson, an incoming senior who works at Jimmy’s Garage.
Some items students made using the 3-D printer.
Earlier this year, prompted by the Ocracoke Mosquito Control Board which supplied all the materials, the students built bat boxes to help islanders contain mosquitoes in a natural way. To read the story, clickhere.
He is particularly proud of continuing improvements to the program begun by his predecessor Roger Meacham.
Ocracoke’s “shop” class now has a 3-D printer, a CNC laser machine and various lathes which puts the school on par with much larger schools.
“I think we have done a wonderful job,” Schleicher said about his students. “I loved teaching at Ocracoke. The students were great and the support of the community for the school is truly amazing.”
And Padgett was happy to have had Schleicher on the team.
“He has done a fantastic job teaching the kids real-life skills, and he will be greatly missed,” Padgett said.
Islander Gary Mitchell, the founder of the contemporary folk band Molasses Creek, has been hired to teach industrial arts, subject to the approval of the Hyde County Board of Education.
laser printerSchleicher and students at work in shop class earlier this year.
Ed Timoney, passenger ferry project manager, shows the schematics for improvements at the Ocracoke Village docks. Photo: C. Leinbach
For Ocracoke news, click here.
By Connie Leinbach
With the awarding of a construction contract, work on building a passenger ferry between Hatteras and Ocracoke Village will begin in September, N.C. Ferry Division officials announced in June.
The N.C. Dept. of Transportation recently awarded a $4.15 million contract to Armstrong Marine Inc. in Swansboro to construct one 98-passenger catamaran-style ferry.
Ed Timoney, project manager, who with Interim Ferry Division Director Jed Dixon, attended the monthly ferry meeting June 12, said the vessel should be ready by the end of April.
“We couldn’t move forward with two,” Dixon said, noting that the entire project budget, including the new ferry and infrastructure changes, is $9.1 million.
Though this ferry will be powered by jet propulsion (as with jet skis), it will not be high-speed but have a maximum speed of under 30 knots.
Dixon said the Ferry Division is building only one passenger ferry at this time and is exploring whether or not to contract out the operating crew as it might be advantageous to hire crew that has experience with these types of boats.
The passenger ferry would be docked in the Ferry Division shipyard in Manns Harbor off season.
Concurrently, dock modifications at Hatteras and Ocracoke also will begin.
“This is new for us and we totally think we have a valuable project,” Dixon said about the service expected to start next May. “It’ll be good all the way around and there’s a lot of Hyde County support.”
Modifications, according to the National Park plan, include adding a covered shelter at the current Visitors Center site and three bathrooms in the trailer that used to house the beach permit office.
Ocracoke Commissioner Tom Pahl noted that with the dock modifications, five to seven temporary boat slips will be lost and asked if there is a plan to replace them. These slips are like parking meters and are on NPS land.
“It’s their decision to lose the slips,” Dixon said about the NPS modification of the docking area.
Dixon said that as of late June, eight boats are running to and from the islands.
“Our numbers have been better for the last three months,” he said. “We’ve been moving a lot of cars.”
Dredging to widen the south dock basin (at the north end of the island), will continue as soon as Dixon gets the required permits. He also is trying get a permit to add rocks to that area.
Moreover, the Ferry Division has a new problem—the sound at the hairpin turn at the ferry lane is perilously close to the road and the ocean breached the road in a late May storm.
Dixon said they have since dumped a bit of nourishment sand there and he is working on getting a permit to deposit more dredge sand along that section of beach.
“We have to work with the NPS to get a permit,” Dixon said.
A problem for dredging, he said, is the lack of spoil sites within the Hatteras Inlet.
“There aren’t a lot of spoil sites out there,” he said. “The site at the South Dock is reaching capacity and we have to find more sites. It’s not an easy thing to get permits for.”
Dixon reported that UNC Charlotte is doing a cost analysis of the ferry fleet, looking at mid-life rebuilds or replacement.
The Ocracoke Mosquito Control Board will hold its quarterly public meeting tomorrow at 6 p.m. (Thursday, June 29) in the Community Center.
In addition to reviewing the financials and normal mosquito control operations, the board will discuss next steps to attempt to improve drainage in the lighthouse area (Live Oak Road, Sarah Ellen Lane, Lighthouse Road, Loop Road) and review the success of drainage improvements at the intersection of British Cemetery Road and Pamlico Shores Road and Back Road at Fig Tree Lane (Duck Path).
Ocracoke Village Independence Day Celebration July 3 to 4, 2017 Sponsored by the Ocracoke Civic and Business Assn. Inc. (OCBA) and Hyde County
Ocracoke will usher in the Independence Day holiday with two days of activities, including fireworks at 9:15 p.m. July 3. The following is the schedule.
Professional fireworks returned to Ocracoke last year. Photo: Melinda Sutton
Monday, July 3: 6 to 8 p.m.: TRADITIONAL ISLAND SQUARE DANCE At Community Square. With Philip Howard as square dance caller and music by Molasses Creek.
8 to 9:15 p.m.: GATHERING AT THE NPS DOCKS Dance tunes and patriotic songs spun by a local deejay
9:15 p.m.: FIREWORKS Launched from the NPS parking lot. Gather at the NPS docks and around Silver Lake Harbor.
Tuesday, July 4: 8 to 10 a.m.:MEET JOBELLE. Born May 7, Jobelle is the newest member of Ocracoke’s wild pony herd. NPS Pony Pens
9 a.m.: FLAG RAISING CEREMONY and SINGING OF NATIONAL ANTHEM Led by Ocracoke Boy Scout Troop # 290. Ocracoke School flag circle on School Road
9:30 a.m. to Noon: 39th ANNUAL SAND SCULPTURE CONTEST At the NPS Lifeguard Beach. Peoples’ choice awards.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: CLASSIC CAR SHOW Pony Island Motel lawn. Sponsored by Jimmy’s Garage.
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: OCRACOKE LIGHTHOUSE The lighthouse will be open for viewing. All are welcome to see inside.
4 p.m.: OLD TIME OCRACOKE PARADE All are welcome to enter. Cash prizes. Entrants should register by July 2, by emailing a photo of the entry form to info@ocracokevillage.com. Pick up your parade entry number between 1 and 4 p.m. on July 4 at Ocracoke Station. Entry forms available at the Post Office, or request a form from info@ocracokevillage.com.
Parade route starts at Ocracoke Oyster Co. and ends at the NPS Parking Lot.
6 p.m.: STORYTELLING WITH DONALD DAVIS On the lawn at Books to Be Red; bring your own chair or blanket
7 p.m.: NATIONAL ANTHEM AND AWARDS PRESENTATION Winners announced for Parade and Sand Sculpture Contest. Books to Be Red lawn
EVENING CELEBRATION Ocracoke Day Use Area/Lifeguard Beach 7 to 10 p.m.: COMMUNITY BEACH FIRE Bring your beach blanket, chair, and marshmallows to roast. OCBA will provide a beach fire for all to enjoy.
This article was originally published in the October 2010 Ocracoke Observer
By Pat Garber; photos by Barbara Adams
…If such a place there be, an island in the sun, where horses free as spindrift run..
– Jeanetta Hennings, from her book “Conquistadore’s Legacy. The Horses of Ocracoke,” 1985
Thirty-three years ago, on the island of Ocracoke, North Carolina, a banker pony mare retreated into the marsh grasses along the Pamlico Sound to have her foal.
The foal, a brown and white pinto colt, clambered to his feet, following his mother as she rejoined the other ponies in her band. The leader of the pony band, a handsome chestnut stallion, was his father. He led the ponies as they sought out the tough but tasty spartina grasses which made up their diet and dug down into the ground for fresh water.
On nice days the colt frolicked in the waters of the sound with other colts and fillies, and when storms rolled in he hunkered down at the dunes, protected by the other members of the band.
The ponies lived as if they were wild, but they were in fact overseen by the National Park Service, and the lands they roamed were part of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. One of the park rangers, Jim Hennings, and his wife Jeanetta took a special interest in them. They knew the stallion as Jim and the mare as Old Paint, and they named the new colt Mr. Bob.
As he grew older Mr. Bob proved to be a wise and gentle pony, so Jim decided to train him to work for the Park Service. Ranger Judy Lawson recalls how gentle he was, and how good he was with the kids. In particular she remembers one day when she was helping with his training and someone forgot to cinch up his saddle.
“I got on and I went full circle,” she said, “and he didn’t get upset or anything.”
During the summers of 1978 to ‘80, Mr. Bob was ridden by Alice Rosazza in the living history programs Jim organized for visitors to the Park. In 1981, when newly hired park ranger Howard Bennink asked to use a horse to patrol the beach, Mr. Bob became the first horse in Ocracoke’s National Park Service Beach Patrol.
Howard, now a teacher at Ocracoke School, rode Mr. Bob along the beach from the Pony Pens to the airport and back, and used him to patrol the parking lots during the Ocracoke Crab Festival and 4th of July celebrations. He also rode him in several of the 4th of July parades during the 1990s, and more recently Mr. Bob has been one of the ponies on exhibit at the Ocracoke Museum’s special 4th of July ceremony.
“Bob was a good boy,” recalls Bennink, but “he had a bad-egg brother–Owen K. He also had a full sister called South Wind.”
No one knows how or when the ponies first came to Ocracoke, although there are a number of theories.
New filly Jobelle, born May 17, is the newest member of the Ocracoke pony herd bringing the total to 16. Here grazes with her mother Jitterbug on Ocracoke. Photo courtesy of the NPS.
Legend has it that the original ponies were brought over on Spanish ships in the 16th century. The ships may have wrecked on treacherous shoals, or the Spaniards may have deliberately released them when they prepared to return to Spain.
One explanation is that Sir Richard Grenville, leading an expedition from England in 150, stopped at a Spanish island to pick up supplies and stock ((including some of the Spanish ponies) on his way to Roanoke Island in Dare County. His ship ran aground in Ocracoke Inlet and some of the ponies were released to lighten the load so the ship could break free.
However they may have gotten here, there is little doubt that they are of Spanish origin. They still have the characteristics of the small, hardy horses bred by the Moors, combining their Iberian stock with North African Barbs and Arabians. They are really small horses rather than ponies, with short backs (having one fewer lumbar vertebra than other horses), short legs and a sloping croup.
They are even-tempered, intelligent and tough. When Ocracoke was settled by the English, they began riding the ponies and using them for plowing gardens, pulling carts, and hauling freight. When the Life Saving Service, forerunner of the Coast Guard, was established in the 19th century, the Ocracoke ponies were used for patrolling the beaches and rescuing shipwreck victims.
The main herds, however, continued to run free. There was a round-up, or pony-penning, every year on the Fourth of July. Islanders would start at the far end of the island, on horseback, herding the bands of ponies toward the village. There would be several hundred horses, and as the stallions from the various bands were bunched together, they would sometimes fight. People from the village would gather around to watch, and there was a festive air on the island, with lemonade, ice cream and other treats.
Several areas were used, over the years, for penning the ponies. One was in front of the Island Inn, one at Windmill Point, one near Sam Jones’ Castle and one at the cow pens (the present pony pen.) There, the ponies were branded, gelded and broken. Some were separated to be used in the village or sold on the mainland, and the rest were turned loose to run free again.
Ocracoke ponies.
During the 1950s, Capt. Marvin Howard, retired from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, turned Ocracoke’s Boy Scouts into the only mounted scout troop in the country. Those boys who did not already have ponies caught and broke one, and they all learned to ride in formation.
A number of native Ocracokers today have fond memories of their scouting days, when they went on camping trips, rode in parades and entered races at the Pirates’ Jamboree in Buxton. According to Bennink, Mr.Bob is the grandson of the pony James Barrie Gaskill rode in the Boy Scouts.
After Highway 12 was built it became unsafe for the ponies to roam free, and for a while their fate was undetermined. In 1967 the National Park Service agreed, in response to public sentiment, to take over their care, protecting them as a cultural resource. They fenced a 180-acre area near the center of the island which included salt marsh, sound, and high ground, and it was here that Mr. Bob was born.
When Jim Hennings arrived, he had a barn and more corrals built near the pony pen. Following Hennings, Park ranger Bill Caswell oversaw the Ocracoke ponies for a number of years. More buildings and corrals were added, and the feeding of hay and grain became a daily routine.
Today the Park Service has a “wrangler,” Laura Michaels, whose main job is seeing to the needs of the ponies. She loves the ponies and the work she does with them.
Gone, however, are the idyllic days of freedom expressed by Jeanetta Hennings’ poem. In 2003 Hurricane Isabel destroyed the pony barn and most of the fences and sanded in part of the pasture lands. When the Park Service rebuilt, they enclosed only 100 acres. Storms continually tore out the fencing that allowed the ponies to go into Pamlico Sound, so it was moved so that the ponies no longer have access to the sound.
For a number of reasons, including health issues, many of the ponies are kept in pens close to the barn where they can be more closely supervised. Only a few of the ponies roam freely. The size of the herd has declined over the last few years, and there are, as of September 2010, only 15 Ocracoke ponies left.
In an effort to increase the herd and maintain its banker bloodlines, the National Park Service borrowed two Shackleford Island stallions to breed with the Ocracoke mares. The plan proved successful in March of this year when Spirit, an Ocracoke pony mare had a foal, called Paloma, by one of the stallions. The rangers are waiting now to see if two other pony mares have been bred. Also recently, the National Park Service adopted two young Shackleford mares, in hopes of breeding them to an Ocracoke pony stallion.
Mr. Bob’s health began failing as he grew older, though he rallied several times. He has recently lived in what Laura calls the geriatric section of the pony pens, getting food supplements and veterinary care. On Sept. 8, 2010, he died a peaceful death. His life spanned 33 years of change, both on the island and in National Park Service policies. He is remembered with fondness and respect.
Pat Garber worked with the ponies as a “Volunteer in the Park”during the 1990s, and she rode Rondo, another Ocracoke pony, alongside Mr. Bob in the Fourth of July parades. She is the author of several books about Ocracoke, including a children’s book called “Little Sea Horse and the Story of the Ocracoke Ponies,” published by the Ocracoke Preservation Society and available at island shops and online.
Barbara Adams is an artist who lives on Ocracoke. Her artwork can be seen in Down Creek Gallery.