A Special Memorial Day Report
By VIVIAN  GRANT
May 2008
Following the end of the Civil War, many  communities set aside a day to mark the end of the war and as a memorial to  those who died.
It is estimated that 1.5 million horses died in the Civil  War.
Not included formally, but most certainly in the hearts and minds of  the cavalry, were these horses.
That was far from the beginning, and  certainly not the end, of the use of the Horse in War.
Introduction
Horses have been used  in human warfare for millennia, probably since the time of domestication of the  horse. Horses were specially trained for a variety of military uses, including  battle, individual combat, reconnaissance (scouting), transport, and supply. The  term war horse usually refers to horses used for fighting, whether as cavalry in  battle or in individual combat. The best-known war horse was the destrier,  ridden by the knight of the Middle Ages. However, even horses used for purposes  other than direct combat played a critically important part of successful  military ventures. There are still some uses for horses in the military even in  today's modern world. Source
World War I
Horses were heavily  used in World War One. Horses were involved in the war's first military conflict  involving Great Britain - a cavalry attack near Mons in August 1914. Horses were  primarily to be used as a form of transport during the war.
When the war  broke out in Western Europe in August 1914, both Britain and Germany had a  cavalry force that each numbered about 100,000 men.
In August 1914,  no-one could have contemplated the horrors of trench warfare - hence why the  cavalry regiments reigned supreme. In fact, in Great Britain the cavalry  regiments would have been seen as the senior regiments in the British Army,  along with the Guards regiments, and very many senior army positions were held  by cavalry officers.
However, the cavalry charge seen near Mons was  practically the last seen in the war. Trench warfare made such charges not only  impractical but impossible. A cavalry charge was essentially from a bygone  military era and machine guns, trench complexes and barbed wire made such  charges all but impossible. However, some cavalry charges did occur despite the  obvious reasons as to why they should not.
I March 1918, the  British launched a cavalry charge at the Germans. By the Spring of 1918, the war  had become more fluid but despite this, out of 150 horses used in the charge  only 4 survived. The rest were cut down by German machine gun  fire.
However, though a cavalry charge was no longer a viable military  tactic, horses were still invaluable as a way of transporting materials to the  front. Military vehicles, as with any mechanised vehicles of the time, were  relatively new inventions and prone to problems. Horses, along with mules, were  reliable forms of transport and compared to a lorry needed little  upkeep.
Such was the use of horses on the Western Front that over 8  million died on all sides fighting in the war. Two and a half million horses  were treated in veterinary hospitals with about two million being sufficiently  cured that they could return to duty.  Source
World War II
Though formal mounted  cavalry began to be phased out as fighting forces during or immediately after  World War I, cavalry units that included horses still had military uses well  into World War II.
The most famous example was the under equipped Polish  army, which used its horse cavalry in World War II to defend Poland against the  armies of Nazi Germany during the 1939 invasion.
Other nations used  horses extensively during WWII, though not necessarily in direct  combat.
Hitler's armies reportedly used more horses and mules in WWII  than the German armies used in WWI.
LoneSentry asserts:
Despite  highly ballyhooed emphasis on employment of mechanized forces and on rapid  movement, the bulk of German combat divisions were horse drawn throughout World  War II. Early in the war it was the common belief of the American public that  the German Siegfrieds of Hitler's Blitz rode forth to battle on swift tanks and  motor vehicles. But the notion of the mechanized might of the German Wehrmacht  was largely a glamorized myth born in the fertile brains of newspapermen.  Actually, the lowly horse played a most important part in enabling the German  Army to move about Europe.
Public opinion to the contrary, so great was  the dependence of the Nazi Blitzkrieg upon the horse that the numerical strength  of German Army horses maintained during the entire war period averaged around  1,100,000. Of the 322 German Army and SS divisions extant in November 1943, only  52 were armored or motorized. Of the November 1944 total of 264 combat  divisions, only 42 were armored or motorized.  Source
Both  the German and the Soviet armies used horses until the end of the war, not only  to transport ammunitions and equipment, but also for reconnaissance and  counter-insurgency efforts. The British Army used mules in India and Southeast  Asia as pack animals.
While the United States Army utilized a few cavalry  and supply units during the war, there were concerns that in rough terrain,  horses were not used often enough. In the campaigns in North Africa, generals  such as George S. Patton lamented their lack, saying, "had we possessed an  American cavalry division with pack artillery in Tunisia and in Sicily, not a  German would have escaped." Source
Last Charge
The last American  mounted tactical cavalry unit in combat was the 26th Cavalry (Philippine Scouts)  in Philippines, stationed at Ft Stotsenburg, Luzon, 1942, which fought both  mounted and dismounted against Japanese invasion troops in 1942.
On the  Bataan Peninsula, the 26th Cavalry (PS) staged a mounted attack against the  Japanese on 16 January 1942. The battered, exhausted men of the 26th Cavalry  climbed astride their horses and flung themselves moments against the blazing  gun muzzles of Japanese tanks.
This last mounted pistol charge was led by  Ed Ramsey in command of G troop, 26th Cavalry. It was the last mounted charge in  America's annals, and proved the climax of the 26th Cavalry's magnificent but  doomed horseback campaign against the Imperial Japanese Army during the fall of  the Philippines in 1941-42.
According to a Bataan survivor interviewed in  the Washington Post (10 April 1977), starving US and Philippine troops ate all  the regiment's horses. Source
Horses in War Today
Today, formal  combat units of mounted cavalry are in almost all cases a thing of the past,  with horseback units within the modern military used for reconnaissance,  ceremonial, or crowd control purposes. The only remaining fully horse-mounted  regular regiment in the world is India's 61st Cavalry.
Organized armed  fighters on horseback are occasionally seen, particularly in the third world,  though they usually are not officially recognized as part of any national army.  The best-known current examples are the Janjaweed, militia groups seen in the  Darfur region of Sudan, who became notorious for their attacks upon unarmed  civilian populations in the Darfur conflict.
Although horses have little  combat use today by modern armies, the military of many nations still maintain  small numbers of mounted units for certain types of patrol and reconnaissance  duties in extremely rugged terrain, including the current conflict in  Afghanistan. Hungary, some Commonwealth countries, Balkan countries, and the  former Soviet republics of Central Asia maintain cavalry units as part of light  infantry and reconnaissance formations for use in mountainous terrain or areas  where fuel supply may be difficult.   Source
Monumental Oversight
It is said  that there are more horse statues in Washington D.C. that in any other place in  the United States. They do seem to be everywhere.
What you will not see  is a memorial to the horses who gave their lives in times of war.
One was  created in London in  2004, not just to honor horses, but all animals conscripted into the service of  their country.
My dream is that some day one will stand in Washington  D.C.
Vivian  Grant,
President
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