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Regular Cavalry in the Civil War

Regular Cavalry in the Civil War

Category Archives: horses

Horses of a Color

13 Friday Nov 2009

Posted by dccaughey in 1st Cavalry, horses

≈ 1 Comment

I’ve posted before about units attempting to have horses of the same color before and during their service in the Civil War. I came across the following passage in the war memoirs of Captain Isaac Dunkelberger of the 1st U.S. Cavalry concerning the fall of 1863:

“In October we (ed: the Reserve Brigade) were ordered to join the Cavalry corps of the Army of the Potomac. On the 20th of October I was detailed to report to General Meade with my squadron of cavalry.

“I was put on duty of commanding the escort of General Meade. This gave me an ellegant (sic) opportunity to dicipline (sic) and equip my company in a manner that is seldom accomplished in cavalry organizations in time of War. My horses (about two hundred) were all of a size and jet black. They were fed and groomed to perfection.”

It’s good to be on headquarters duty, I guess. At this same time period in the Army of the Cumberland, units were being mounted on mules…

Horses of a Different Color

01 Tuesday May 2007

Posted by dccaughey in cavalry depots, horses

≈ 1 Comment

Most of the fun of combing through shelves of binders and books of research and memoirs is finding new information that one hadn’t known before. Quite often in my case, it also involves realizing that something I thought to be true simply isn’t so. On this particular occasion, it happens to concern some of my thoughts on cavalry mounts during the war.

In a post back in March (found here, to save those interested in reviewing it), I scoffed at the idea that companies and squadrons in a functioning cavalry unit during hostilities would be concerned with obtaining horses of the same color. It simply seemed frivolous given the difficulties of keeping troopers mounted and in the fight. Subsequent incidental research (I didn’t go looking for it, it just kept hitting me in the face during reading) has since shown me the error of my ways.

When the 2nd Cavalry Regiment formed in 1855, it was mounted very well by the standards of the time, with the highest price per mount yet seen in the US Army. Many of these mounts were well-bred Kentucky and Tennessee horses. Despite the fact that the regiment was headed for Texas to fight Comanches immediately after it was formed, all companies were mounted on horses of the same color. Company A was mounted on grays, Companies B and E on sorrels, Companies C, D, F and I on bays, Companies G and H on browns, and Company K on roans (Arnold, Jeff Davis’ Own).

This is relatively logical, I thought. They were just forming the unit, and were not yet in combat, so I suppose matching mounts would be consistent with good order and discipline, etc. But when the same regiment reached Carlisle Barracks after leaving Texas in 1861, something similar occurred again. According to then-Captain Richard W. Johnson in his memoirs, “When enough (horses) had been received they were distributed among the companies, as far as possible making the color in each company uniform.” (Johnson, A Soldier’s Reminiscences, pg 160) Since they were the only cavalry in the area at the time, they should have had their pick of what was available.

Nor was this limited to the 2nd Cavalry. According to George Sanford, when the 1st Cavalry Regiment remounted at Giesborough Point following the Gettysburg campaign, “a capital mount was secured, each battalion of four troops receiving horses of one color. One battalion was bay, one black, and one chestnut. The trumpeters and band rode grey horses.” (Sanford, Fighting Rebels and Redskins, pg 211)

I’m sure this is not to say that a trooper wouldn’t be accepted back into his company if he showed up with the wrong-colored remount, but I did think it interesting that the attempt was made.

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A Meaningful Finale

A 28-year Army veteran takes to the Appalachian Trail to contemplate a life well served & the road ahead

The Task at Hand

A Writer's On-Going Search for Just the Right Words

Bull Runnings

A Journal of the Digitization of a Civil War Battle

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A blog dedicated to documenting through primary sources, the Army's actions at Wounded Knee

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Where history, scholarship, the academic life, and other stuff meet.

Campaigns of the U. S. Civil War

Campaigns of the U. S. Civil War

Irish in the American Civil War

Exploring Irish Emigration in the 19th Century United States

To the Sound of the Guns

Military History

Daydreams of the Soul

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