1: the evolution of the American cavalryman
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Union soldier with two horses. |
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The first experiment: seventh New York cavalry, 1862
The men on dress parade here, in 1862, are much smarter, with their band and white gloves, their immaculate uniforms and horses all of one color, than the troopers in the field a year later.
It was not known at that time how important a part the cavalry was to play in the great war. The organization of this three months regiment was reluctantly authorized by the War Department in Washington.
These are the Seventh New York Cavalry, the “Black horse,” organized at Troy, mustered in November 6, 1861, and mustered out March 31, 1862.
They were designated by the State authorities Second Regiment Cavalry on November 18, 1861, but the designation was changed by the War Department to the Seventh New York Cavalry.
The seven companies left for Washington, D. C., November 23, 1861, and remained on duty there till the following March.
The regiment was honorably discharged, and many of its members saw real service later.
General I. N. Palmer, appears in the foreground with his staff, third from the left. |
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Cavalry of the Civil War its evolution and influence
Theo. F. Rodenbough, Brigadier-General, United States Army (Retired)
It may surprise non-military readers to learn that the
United States, unprepared as it is for war, and unmilitary as are its people, has yet become a model for the most powerful armies of
Europe, at least in one respect.
The leading generals and teachers in the art and science of war now admit that our grand struggle of 1861-65 was rich in examples of the varied use of mounted troops in the field, which are worthy of imitation.
Lieutenant-General von Pelet-Narbonne, in a lecture before the
Royal United Service Institution of
Great Britain, emphatically maintains that “in any case one must remember that, from the days of
Napoleon until the present time, in no single campaign has cavalry exercised so vast an influence over the operations as they did in this war, wherein, of a truth, the personality of the leaders has been very striking; such men as, in the
South, the God-inspired
Stuart, and later the redoubtable
Fitzhugh Lee, and on the
Northern side,
Sheridan and
Pleasonton.”
For a long time after our Civil War, except as to its political or commercial bearing, that conflict attracted but little attention abroad.
A great German strategist was reported to have said that “the war between the States was largely an affair of armed mobs” --a report, by the way, unverified, but which doubtless had its effect upon military students.
In the meantime other wars came to pass in succession — Austro-Prussian (1866), Franco-
German (1870), Russo-Turkish (1877), and later the
Boer War and that between
Russia and
Japan.
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The American cavalryman--1864
The type of American cavalryman developed by the conditions during the war fought equally well on foot and on horseback.
In fact, he found during the latter part of the war that his horse was chiefly useful in carrying him expeditiously from one part of the battlefield to the other.
Except when a mounted charge was ordered, the horses were far too valuable to be exposed to the enemy's fire, be he Confederate or Federal.
It was only when cavalry was fighting cavalry that the trooper kept continually mounted.
The Federal sabers issued at the beginning of the war were of long, straight Prussian pattern, but these were afterward replaced by a light cavalry saber with curved blade.
A carbine and revolver completed the Federal trooper's equipment. |
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In none of these campaigns were the cavalry operations conspicuous for originality or importance as auxiliary to the main forces engaged.
Meanwhile, the literature of the
American war — official and personal — began to be studied, and its campaigns were made subjects for text-books and monographs by British authors, which found ready publishers.
Nevertheless, the
American cavalry method has not gained ground abroad without a struggle.
On the one hand, the failure of cavalry in recent
European wars to achieve success has been made use of by one class of critics, who hold that “the cavalry has had its day” ; that “the improved rifle has made cavalry charges impracticable” ; that it has degenerated into mere mounted infantry, and that its value as an arm of service has been greatly impaired.
On the other hand it is held by the principal cavalry leaders who have seen service in the field —
Field-
Marshal Lord Roberts,
Generals French,
Hamilton, and
Baden-
Powell (of Boer War fame), De Negrier and Langlois of
France, and
Von Bernhardi of
Germany, and others, (1) that while the method of using modern cavalry has changed, the arm itself is more important in war than ever; (2) that its scope is broadened; (3) that its duties require a higher order of intelligence and training of its personnel — officers and men, and (4), above all, that it is quite possible to turn out a modern horse-soldier, armed with saber and rifle, who will be equally efficient, mounted or dismounted.
Still the battle of the pens goes merrily on — the champions of the
arme blanche or of the rifle alone, on the one side, and the defenders of the combination of those weapons on the other.
The next great war will demonstrate, beyond peradventure, the practical value of “the
American idea,” as it is sometimes called.
A glance at the conditions affecting the use of mounted troops in this country prior to our Civil War may be instructive;
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The arme blanche or the rifle
The eternal question that has confronted cavalry experts ever since long-range firearms became effective, is whether the modern cavalryman should use the saber — the arme blanche--or the rifle, or both the arms together.
The failure of cavalry to achieve success in recent European wars has been used by one class of critics to prove that “the cavalry has had its day” and that “the improved rifle had made cavalry charges impracticable.”
On the other hand, many of the experienced cavalry leaders of the present day hold that it is quite possible to turn out a modern horse-soldier, armed with saber and rifle, who will be equally efficient, mounted or dismounted.
In 1911 an American board of officers recommended, however, that the United States troopers should give up their revolvers on the principle that two arms suffice — the carbine for long distance, the saber for hand-to-hand fighting. |
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it will show that eighty-five years of great and small wars, Indian fighting, and frontier service, proved to be a training school in which the methods followed by
Sheridan,
Stuart,
Forrest, and others of their time had been really initiated by their famous predecessors —
Marion, the “Swamp
Fox,” and “Light horse Harry” Lee of the
War for Independence,
Charlie May and
Phil Kearny of the
Mexican War, and those old-time dragoons and Indian fighters,
Harney and
Cooke.
Before the Revolution of 1776, the colonists were generally armed with, and proficient in the use of, the rifle — of long barrel and generous bore — and familiarity with the broken and wooded surface of the country made them formidable opponents of the
British from the start, who both in tactical methods and armament were very inferior to the
American patriots.
Fortescue, an English writer, records the fact that “at the time of the
Lexington fight there was not a rifle in the whole of the
British army, whereas there were plenty in the, hands of the
Americans, who understood perfectly how to use them.”
In the mountains of
Kentucky and
Tennessee, bodies of horsemen, similarly armed, were readily formed, who, if ignorant of cavalry maneuvers, yet with little preparation became the finest mounted infantry the world has ever seen; distinguishing themselves in numerous affairs, notably at
King's Mountain, South Carolina, September 25, 1780, where two thousand sturdy “Mountain men,” hastily assembled under
Colonels Sevier,
Shelby, and
Campbell, surrounded and almost annihilated a force of twelve hundred men (one hundred and twenty being regulars) under.
Major Ferguson, of the
British army.
Marion, the partisan, led a small brigade of mounted infantry, who generally fought on foot, although at times charging and firing from the saddle.
There were also small bodies of cavalry proper, using the saber and pistol, with effect, against the
British cavalry in many dashing combats.
The War of 1812 was not conspicuous for mounted operations, but the irregular warfare which preceded and followed
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Graduates of “the rough school of war”
The photograph reproduced above through the courtesy of Captain Noble D. Preston, who served with the Tenth New York Cavalry here represented, shows to what stage the troopers had progressed in the rough school of war by the winter of 1862-3.
The Tenth New York was organized at Elmira, N. Y., September 27, 1861, and moved to Gettysburg, Penn., December 24th, where it remained till March, 1862.
It took part in the battle of Fredericksburg in December, 1862, and participated in the famous “mud march,” January, 1863, about the time this photograph was taken.
The men had ample time for schooling and training in the Middle Department, in Maryland and the vicinity of Washington.
They proved their efficiency in Stoneman's raid in April, 1863, and at Brandy Station and Warrenton.
Later they accompanied Sheridan on his Richmond raid in May, 1864, in the course of which Stuart met his death, and they were still “on duty” with Grant at Appomattox. |
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that “difference” with the mother country, further demonstrated the value of the dual armament of saber and rifle.
The cavalry particularly distinguished itself in
General Wayne's campaign of 1794 against the
Northwestern Indians, and again under
Harrison in the historic
battle of Tippecanoe, November 7, 1811.
At the battle of the
Thames, October 5, 1813, a decisive charge made by a regiment of
Kentucky cavalry against a large force of British and Indians was successful, resulting in the defeat of the enemy and death of the famous chieftain,
Tecumseh.
General Jackson's campaigns (1813-14) against the
Creek Indians were marked by effective work on the part of the mounted volunteers.
In 1833, Congress reorganized the regular cavalry by creating one regiment, followed in 1836 by another, called respectively, the First and Second United States Dragoons.
The First Dragoons were sent to the
Southwest to watch the Pawnees and Comanches.
On this expedition, it was accompanied by
Catlin, the artist, who made many of his Indian sketches then.
These regiments have been in continuous service ever since.
The first service of the Second Dragoons was against the
Seminole Indians, in
Florida, and for seven years the regiment illustrated the adaptability of the
American soldier to service in the field under the most trying circumstances.
“There was at one time to be seen in the Everglades, the dragoon (dismounted) in water from three to four feet deep; the sailor and marine wading in the mud in the midst of cypress stumps; and the infantry and artillery alternately on the land, in the water, or in boats.”
Here again, the combined mounted and dismounted action of cavalry was tested in many sharp encounters with the Indians.
It was but a step from the close of the
Florida war to the war with
Mexico, 1846-47.
The available American cavalry comprised the two regiments of dragoons and seven new regiments of volunteers.
The regular regiments were in splendid
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The first United States regular cavalry
The sturdy self-reliance of these sabreurs, standing at ease though without a trace of slouchiness, stamps them as the direct successors of Marion, the “Swamp Fox,” and of “Light-horse Harry” Lee of the War for Independence.
The regiment has been in continuous service from 1833 to the present day. Organized as the First Dragoons and sent to the southwest to watch the Pawnees and Comanches at the time it began its existence, the regiment had its name changed to the First United States Regular Cavalry on July 27, 1861, when McClellan assumed command of the Eastern army.
This photograph was taken at Brandy Station in February, 1864.
The regiment at this time was attached to the Reserve Brigade under General Wesley Merritt.
The troopers took part in the first battle of Bull Run, were at the siege of Yorktown, fought at Gaines' Mill and Beverly Ford, served under Merritt on the right at Gettysburg, and did their duty at Yellow Tavern, Trevilian Station, and in the Shenandoah Valley under Sheridan; and they were present at Appomattox. |
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condition.
The most brilliant exploit was the charge made by May's squadron of the Second Dragoons upon a Mexican light battery at
Resaca de la Palma, May 9, 1846, which resulted in the capture of the battery and of
General La Vega, of the
Mexican artillery.
This dashing affair was afterward to be repeated many times in the great struggle between the North and South.
The sphere of action, however, which had the most direct bearing upon the cavalry operations of the war was that known as “the
Plains.”
The experience gained in the twelve years from 1848 to 1860, in frequent encounters with the restless Indian tribes of the
Southwest, the long marches over arid wastes, the handling of supply trains, the construction of military roads, the exercise of command, the treatment of cavalry horses and draught animals, and the numerous other duties falling to officers at frontier posts, far distant from railroad or telegraph, all tended to temper and sharpen the blades that were to point the “path of glory” to thousands destined to ride under the war-guidons of
Sheridan,
Stuart,
Buford,
Pleasonton,
Fitzhugh Lee,
Stanley,
Wilson,
Merritt,
Gregg, and others — all graduates of the service school of “the
Plains.”
At the outbreak of the
Civil War, the military conditions in the two sections were very unequal.
The South began the struggle under a commander-in-chief who was a graduate of
West Point, had seen service in the regular army, had been a
Secretary of War (possessing much inside information as to the disposition of the United States forces) and who, in the beginning at least, was supreme in the selection of his military lieutenants and in all matters relating to the organization and equipment of the
Confederate troops.
On the other hand the
North lacked similar advantages.
Its new
President was without military training, embarrassed rather than aided by a cabinet of lawyers and politicians as military advisers, captains of the pen rather than of the sword, and “blind leading the blind.”
Mr. Lincoln found himself
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American lancers — the sixth Pennsylvania
Few people have heard that there was an American regiment of lancers in 1861-1863. Colonel Richard Rush's regiment, the Sixth Pennsylvania, attempted to fight in this European fashion during the great conflict in which so much was discovered about the art of war. The Pennsylvanians carried the lance from December, 1861, until May, 1863, when it was discarded for the carbine, as being unsuited to the wooded country of Virginia through which the command operated.
The regiment was organized in Philadelphia by Colonel Richard H. Rush, August to October, 1861, and was composed of the best blood in that aristocratic city.
The usual armament of Federal volunteer cavalry regiments at the outset of the war consisted of a saber and a revolver.
At least two squadrons, consisting of four troops of from eighty-two to a hundred men, were armed with rifles and carbines.
Later, all cavalry regiments were supplied with single-shot carbines, the decreased length and weight of the shorter arm being a decided advantage to a soldier on horseback. |
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surrounded by office-seekers — especially those claiming high military command as a reward for political services.
It is true that the
Federal Government possessed a small, well-trained army, with a large proportion of the officers and nearly all of the enlisted men loyal to their colors, which, together with a few thousand organized militia, would have formed a valuable nucleus for war had it been properly utilized at the start.
From its ranks some were selected who achieved distinction as leaders when not hampered by association with incompetent “generals.”
For at least one year, the inexhaustible resources of the
North were wasted for want of competent military direction and training.
If these field conditions marked the genesis of the
Civil War in all arms of service, they were especially true of the mounted troops.
In 1860, the “athletic wave” had not made its appearance in the
United States, and out-of-door amusements had not become popular above the
Mason and
Dixon line.
In the more thickly settled North, the young men of cities and towns took rather to commercial and indoor pursuits; in the
South, the sports of a country life appealed to young and middle-aged alike, and the rifle and the saddle furnished particular attractions to a large majority.
So it happened that the
Confederates (their
President an erstwhile dragoon) had only to mobilize the cavalry companies of the militia scattered through the seceding States, and muster, arm, and equip the thousands of young horsemen, each bringing his own horse and eager to serve the
Confederacy.
The trials of many of the newly recruited organizations, until the beginning of the third year of the war, are illustrated in the following extract from a typical regimental history:
1 Captain Vanderbilt describes in graphic terms his first experience in escort duty (December 10, 1862):
Please remember that my company had been mustered into the service only about six weeks before, and had received horses less than a
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Volunteers at drill: a New York regiment
It was New York State that furnished the first volunteer cavalry regiment to the Union--Autumn, 1861.
The fleet horsemen of the Confederacy soon taught the North the need of improving that arm of the service.
But it requires time to train an efficient trooper, and the Union cavalrymen were helpless at first when opposed to the natural horsemen of the South.
After a purgatory of training they were hurried into the field, often to fall victims to some roving body of Confederates who welcomed the opportunity to appropriate superior arms and equipment.
The regiment in this photograph is the Thirteenth New York Cavalry at Prospect Hill, Virginia.
They are no longer raw troopers but have become the “eyes” of Washington and its chief protection against the swift-riding Mosby and his men. The troopers were drilled on foot as well as mounted. |
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month prior to this march; and in the issue we drew everything on the list — watering-bridles, lariat ropes, and pins — in fact, there was nothing on the printed list of supplies that we did not get. Many men had extra blankets, nice large quilts presented by some fond mother or maiden aunt (dear souls), sabers and belts, together with the straps that pass over the shoulders, carbines and slings, pockets full of cartridges, nose bags and extra little bags for carrying oats, haversacks, canteens, and spurs — some of them of the Mexican pattern as large as small windmills, and more in the way than the spurs of a young rooster, catching in the grass when they walked, carrying up briers, vines, and weeds, and catching their pants, and in the way generally — curry-combs, brushes, ponchos, button tents, overcoats, frying-pans, cups, coffee-pots, etc. Now the old companies had become used to these things and had got down to light-marching condition gradually, had learned how to wear the uniform, saber, carbine, etc.; but my company had hardly time to get into proper shape when “the general” was sounded, “boots and saddles” blown.
Such a rattling, jingling, jerking, scrabbling, cursing, I never heard before.
Green horses — some of them had never been ridden — turned round and round, backed against each other, jumped up or stood up like trained circus-horses.
Some of the boys had a pile in front on their saddles, and one in the rear, so high and heavy it took two men to saddle one horse and two men to help the fellow into his place.
The horses sheered out, going sidewise, pushing the well-disposed animals out of position, etc. Some of the boys had never ridden anything since they galloped on a hobby horse, and they clasped their legs close together, thus unconsciously sticking the spurs into their horses' sides.
Well, this was the crowd I commanded to mount on the morning I was ordered by General Smith to follow him. We got in line near headquarters, and when we got ready to start we started all over.
He left no doubt about his starting!
He went like greased lightning!
In less than ten minutes Tenth New York cavalrymen might have been seen on every hill for two miles rearward.
Poor fellows!
I wanted to help them, but the general was “On to Richmond” ; and I hardly dared look back for fear of losing him. I didn't have the remotest idea where he was going, and didn't know but he was going to keep it up all day. It was my first Virginia ride as a warrior in the field.
My uneasiness
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A cavalry leader at Gettysburg--General David McM. Gregg and staff
The Federal army at Gettysburg owed much to the cavalry.
As Gettysburg was the turning-point in the fortunes of the Union army, it also marked an epoch in the development of the cavalry, trained in methods which were evolved from no foreign text-books, but from stern experience on the battlefields of America.
The Second Cavalry Division under Gregg patrolled the right flank of the Federal army, with occasional skirmishing, until Stuart's arrival July 3d with the Confederate horse.
Gregg's division and Custer's brigade were then on the right of the line.
The ensuing cavalry battle was one of the fiercest of the war. W. H. F. Lee's brigade made the first charge for Stuart, as did the First Michigan Cavalry for Gregg.
Countercharge followed upon charge.
In a dash for a Confederate battleflag, Captain Newhall was received by its bearer upon the point of the spear-head and hurled to the ground.
Finally the Confederate brigades withdrew behind their artillery, and the danger that Stuart would strike the rear of the Union army simultaneously with Pickett's charge was passed.
This photograph shows Gregg with the officers of his staff. |
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may be imagined.
I was wondering what in the mischief I should say to the general when we halted and none of the company there but me. He was the first real live general I had seen who was going out to fight.
Talk about the Flying Dutchman!
Blankets slipped from under saddles and hung from one corner; saddles slipped back until they were on the rumps of horses; others turned and were on the under side of the animals; horses running and kicking; tin pans, mess-kettles, patent sheet-iron stoves the boys had seen advertised in the illustrated papers and sold by the sutlers of Alexandria — about as useful as a piano or folding bed — flying through the air; and all I could do was to give a hasty glance to the rear and sing out at the top of my voice, “C-l-o-s-e u-p!”
But they couldn't “close.”
Poor boys!
Their eyes stuck out like those of maniacs.
We went only a few miles, but the boys didn't all get up till noon.
It was not until May, 1861, that the War Department at
Washington reluctantly authorized the organization of a regiment of volunteer cavalry from New York with the proviso that the men furnish the horses, an allowance being made for use and maintenance.
This system applied in the
South, but was soon abandoned in the
North.
The door once open, other regiments were speedily formed, containing at least the crude elements of efficient cavalry.
As a rule, the men regarded the horses with mingled curiosity and respect, and passed through a purgatory of training--“breaking in,” it was some-times called — before they had acquired the requisite confidence in themselves, plus horses and arms.
All too soon they were “pitchforked” into the field, often to fall victims to some roving body of Confederates who were eager to appropriate the superior arms and equipment of the
Federals.
Within a year in the rough school of war, these same helpless recruits became fairly efficient cavalry, at home in the saddle, able to deliver telling blows with the saber, and to ride boot-to-boot in battle charges.
During the first two years of the war the Confederate cavalry exercised a tremendous moral effect.
Beginning with the cry of “The Black Horse
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Thirteenth New York cavalry--reserves at Gettsyburg
These were some of the few men who would have stood between Lee and the Northern Capital if the tide of battle which hung in the balance three days at Gettsyburg had rolled with the line in gray.
The organization of the Thirteenth New York Cavalry was not completed till June 20, 1863, ten days before Gettysburg.
Six companies left New York State for Washington on June 23d, and took their part in patrolling the rear of the Army of the Potomac during the three fateful days.
They were more than raw recruits; the regiment had been made up by the consolidation of several incomplete organizations.
Had the troopers arrived a few days earlier they probably would have been brigaded with Pleasonton's cavalry.
A week after Gettysburg they were back in New York quelling the draft riots.
Thereafter they spent their time guarding Washington, when this photograph was taken, and scouting near the armies in the Virginia hills. |
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Cavalry,” at the
First Bull Run, so terrible to the panic-stricken Federal troops in their race to
Washington and safety;
Mosby's frequent dashes at poorly guarded Union trains and careless outposts; and
Stuart's picturesque and gallant promenade around
McClellan's unguarded encampment on the
Chickahominy, in 1862, the war record of the
Southern horse notwithstanding its subsequent decline and the final disasters of 1864-65 will always illumine one of the brightest pages of cavalry history.
The
Gettysburg campaign, June 1 to July 4, 1863, was exceptionally full of examples of the effective use of mounted troops.
They began with the great combat of Beverly Ford, Virginia, June 9th, in which for twelve hours, eighteen thousand of the flower of the horsemen of the armies of the
Potomac and
Northern Virginia, in nearly equal proportions, struggled for supremacy, with many casualties,
2 parting by mutual consent at the close of the day. This was followed by a series of daily skirmishes during the remainder of the month, in efforts to penetrate the cavalry screen which protected each army in its northward progress, culminating on the first day of July at
Gettysburg in the masterly handling of two small brigades of cavalry.
It was here that
General Buford delayed the advance of a division of Confederate infantry for more than two hours, winning for himself, in the opinion of a foreign military critic,
3 the honor of having “with the inspiration of a cavalry officer and a true soldier selected the battlefield where the two armies were about to measure their strength.”
The important actions on the third day comprised that in which
Gregg prevented
Stuart from penetrating the right rear of the
Union line (largely a mounted combat with saber and pistol), and the affair on the
Emmittsburg Road on the same day where
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The cavalry depot at Giesboro, D. C.
The cavalry depot at Giesboro, D. C., established in July, 1863, was the place where remounts were furnished to the cavalry and artillery of the Army of the Potomac during the last two years of the war. The tents in the lower photograph are those of the officers in charge of that immense establishment, where they received and issued thousands of horses.
Convalescents who had lost their mounts, with men to be remounted, were drawn upon to help take care of the horses, until their departure for the front.
This photograph was taken in May, 1864, when
Grant and
Lee were grappling in the
Wilderness and at
Spottsylvania, only seventy miles distant. The inspection of horses for remounting was made by experienced cavalry officers, while the purchasing was under the Quartermaster's Department.
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Stables for six thousand horses |
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Giesboro, D. C.--one of the busiest spots of the war |
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Merritt and
Farnsworth menaced the
Confederate left and, according to General Law,
4 neutralized the action of
Hood's infantry Division of
Longstreet's corps by bold use of mounted and dismounted men, contributing in no small degree to the
Federal success.
In the
West, during the same period, the cavalry conditions were not unlike those in the
East, except that the field of operations extended over five States instead of two and that numerous bands of independent cavalry or mounted riflemen under enterprising leaders like
Forrest,
Morgan,
Wharton,
Chalmers, and
Wheeler of the Confederate army, for two years had their own way. The Union generals,
Lyon,
Sigel,
Pope,
Rosecrans, and others, loudly called for more cavalry, or in lieu thereof, for horses to mount infantry.
Otherwise, they agreed, “it was difficult to oppose the frequent raids of the enemy on communications and supply trains.”
Ultimately,
Generals Grant and
Rosecrans initiated a system of cavalry concentration under
Granger and
Stanley, and greater efficiency became manifest.
About the time of the
battle of Stone's River, or
Murfreesboro, the
Federal horse began to show confidence in itself, and in numerous encounters with the
Confederates--mounted and dismounted-acquitted itself with credit, fairly dividing the honors of the campaign.
The names of
Grierson,
Streight,
Wilder, and
Minty became famous not only as raiders but as important factors in great battles, as at
Chickamauga, where the “obstinate stand of two brigades of [Rosecrans'] cavalry against the Confederate infantry gave time for the formation of the
Union lines.”
The most conspicuous cavalry operations of the war were those of 1864-65:
Sheridan's Richmond raid, in which the
South lost the brilliant and resourceful
Stuart, and the harassing flank attacks on
Lee's army in advance of
Grant's infantry, which, ending in the campaign at
Appomattox, simultaneously with
Wilson's successful
Selma raid, marked
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The cavalry depot in the district of Columbia
This photograph of the cavalry depot at Giesboro is peaceful and orderly enough with the Stars and Stripes drooping lazily in the wind, but it does not betray the hectic activity “behind the scenes.”
Not long after the depot was established the entire Second United States Cavalry was sent there to be remounted, recruited, and refitted.
This operation took about a month, and they were ordered to rejoin the army in October, 1863.
Every company had a special color of horse at the outset, but this effect was speedily lost in the field, except for the grays.
“These were easily recruited,” said an old cavalryman, “because nobody wanted grays.
They were too conspicuous.
No, I don't mean that they attracted the enemy's fire, but a gray horse that lies down in muddy places is very apt to get dirty.
If you were coming in from a night of picket duty, would you rather take a rest, or spend your time getting your horse ready for inspection?
The dark-coated animals did not show the dirt so much.”
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Ever-busy troopers at drill: Union cavalry in winter quarters
The swiftly moving Confederate troopers, under dashing leaders like Stuart and Wheeler, allowed the heads of the Union cavalry not a moment of peace.
When infantry went into winter quarters they could live in comparative comfort and freedom from actual campaigning until the roads became passable again for their heavy wagon-trains in the spring.
But Confederate raiders knew neither times nor seasons, and there were many points when the damage they might do would be incalculable.
So the Federal cavalry's winter task was to discover, if possible, the Confederates' next move, and to forestall it. This photograph shows three troops drilling on the plain beside their winter quarters.
The stark trees and absence of grass indicate clearly the time of the year, and the long shadows show as truly as a watch that the time of day was late afternoon.
A swift night-march may be in store for the troopers on the plain, or they may return to the shelter of their wooden huts.
It is probable, however, that they cannot enjoy their comfort for more than a week or two. |
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the collapse of the war. Under most discouraging conditions the Confederate cavalry disputed every inch of territory and won the sincere admiration of their opponents.
Major McClelland, of
Stuart's staff, thus impartially summarizes the situation:
5
During the last two years no branch of the Army of the Potomac contributed so much to the overthrow of Lee's army as the cavalry, both that which operated in the Valley of Virginia and that which remained at Petersburg.
But for the efficiency of this force it is safe to say that the war would have been indefinitely prolonged.
From the time that the cavalry was concentrated into a corps until the close of the war, a steady progress was made in discipline.
Nothing was spared to render this arm complete.
Breech-loading arms of the most approved pattern were provided; horses and accouterments were never wanting, and during the last year of the war Sheridan commanded as fine a body of troops as ever drew sabers.
On the other hand, two causes contributed steadily to diminish the numbers and efficiency of the Confederate cavalry.
The Government committed the fatal error of allowing the men to own their horses, paying them a per diem for their use, and the muster valuation in cases where they were killed in action; but giving no compensation for horses lost by any other casualties of a campaign. . . . Toward the close of the war many were unable to remount themselves, and hundreds of such dismounted men were collected in a useless crowd, which was dubbed “Company Q.”
The second cause was the failure or inability of the Government to supply good arms and accouterments.
Our breech-loading arms were nearly all captured from the enemy and the same may be said of the best of our saddles and bridles.
From these causes, which were beyond the power of any commander to remedy, there was a steady decline in the numbers of the Confederate cavalry and, as compared with the Federal cavalry, a decline in efficiency.