|
2005
The Horse
|
|
About The Cavalry Horse Excerpted from the web site of the 17th PA Volunteer Cavalry Co. E
Potomac Creek, May 12, 1863 It is by no means a pleasant thought to reflect how little
people at home know of the non-fighting details of waste and suffering of war. We were in
the field four weeks, and only once did I see the enemy, even at a distance. You read of
Stonemans and Griersons cavalry raids, and of the dashing celerity of their
movements and their long, rapid marches. Do you know how cavalry moves? It never goes out
of walk, and four miles an hour is But with the horses it is otherwise and you have no idea of their sufferings. An officer of cavalry needs to be more horse-doctor than soldier, and no one who has not tried it can realize the discouragement to Company commanders in these long and continuous marches. You are a slave to your horses, you work like a dog yourself, and you exact the most extreme care from your Sergeants, and you see diseases creeping on you day by day and your horses breaking down under your eyes, and you have two resources, one to send them to the reserve camps at the rear and so strip yourself of your command, and the other to force them on until they drop and then run for luck that you will be able to steal horses to remount your men, and keep up the strength of your command. The last course is the one I adopt. I do my best for my horses and am sorry for them; but all war is cruel and it is my business to bring every man I can into the presence of the enemy, and so make war short. So I have but one rule, a horse must go until he cant be spurred any further, and then the rider must get another horse as soon as he can seize on one. To estimate the wear and tear on horseflesh you must bear in mind that, in the service in this country, a cavalry horse when loaded carries an average of 225 lbs. on his back. His saddle, when packed without a rider in it, weights no less than fifty pounds. The horse is, in active campaign, saddled on an average about
fifteen hours out of the twenty four. His feed is nominally ten pounds of grain a day and,
in reality, he averages about eight pounds. He has no hay and only such other feed as he
can pick up during halts. The usual water he drinks is brook water, so muddy by the
passage of the column as to be of the color of chocolate. Of course, sore backs are our
greatest trouble. Backs soon get feverish under the saddle and the first days march
swells them; after that day by day the trouble grows. No care can stop it. Every night
after a march, no matter how late it may be, or tired or hungry I am if permission is
given to unsaddle, I examine all the horses backs myself and see that everything is
done for them that can be done, and yet with every care the marching of the last four
weeks disabled ten of my horses, and put ten more on the high road to disability, and this
out of sixty one horse in three. Imagine a horse with his withers swollen to three
times the On this last raid dying horses lined the road on which Stonemans divisions had passed, and we marched over a road made pestilent by the dead horses of the vanished rebels. Poor brutes! How it would astonish and terrify you and all others at home with your sleek, well-fed animals, to see the weak, gaunt, rough animals, with each rib visible and hipbones starting through the flesh, on which these "dashing cavalry raids" were executed. It would knock romance out of you. So much for my cares as a horsemaster, and they are the cares of all. For, I can safely assure you, my horses are not the worst in the regiment, and I am reputed no unsuccessful chief groom. I put 70 horses in the field on the 13th of April, and not many other Captains in the service did as much.... |
|
Send mail to
problems@keybridgecorporation.com with problems or comments about this web
site .
|