ters lie."
H.A.
"MARSH TACKIES"
"Marsh Tackies" is the name given by the negroes to the little, wild
horses of the Carolina coast country's swamps and sea islands. Early
traditions say that these horses were found by the English when they
first came and that they are the descendants of runaways from the
Spanish settlements to the South about St. Augustine, or horses turned
loose by DeSoto upon his ill-fated march to the Mississippi. These
horses pick up a precarious living in out-of-the-way sections along the
coast, and are occasionally taken and broken in by the negroes. They are
the "poor horse trash" of the section.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alstons and Allstons of South Carolina S.C. GRAVES
Annual Report of the Am. Hist. Ass. 1913
Aaron Burr, Memoirs, Life, and Letters
Charleston Courier OLD FILES
Charleston Mercury OLD FILES
Charleston the Place and the People RAVENEL
Colonial History of South Carolina LAWSON
Defense of Charleston Harbor JOHNSON
Diary from Dixie CHESTNUT
Edgar Allan Poe WOODBURY
Edgar Allan Poe, How to Know Him SMITH
Edgar Allen Poe HARRISON
Mobile Mercury OLD FILES
Proceedings of the American Philos. Soc. VOL. XXVI
Pirates, The Carolina HUGHSON, JOHNS HOPKINS
PRESS PAMPHLET
Submarines PAMPHLET, SMYTHE, A.T., JR.
South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine VOL. XIV
Theodosia PIDGIN
***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAROLINA CHANSONS***
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