McCLELLAN SADDLES

"LIGHT BUT STURDY"

 

Photo from Rocky Mountain Arsenal taken in 1953

This saddle was used by a Major Plummer,
Staff surgeon for General Sherman in his "March to the Sea"

In April 1855–six years before the start of the Civil War, Capt. George B. McClellan sailed to Europe as part of a military commission to study the latest developments in European tactics, weaponry, and logistics. McClellan’s focus was on the organization of engineer troops and cavalry. After the tour, which lasted a year and included observing battles of the Crimean War, McClellan brought back almost 100 books and manuals. These he read before writing his report, which concluded with his proposed manual for American cavalry adapted from Russian cavalry regulations. He also designed a cavalry saddle that was a modification of a Hungarian model used in the Prussian Service. It has also been stated in the book, entitled, "The Cavalry" written in 1911, that it was in reality just a modification of the Mexican or Texan tree saddle.

The U.S. War Department in 1859 adopted the McClellan saddle. It was an excellent saddle and remained the standard issue with slight improvements, for the remaining history of the horse cavalry. The saddle was simple and less expensive than existing saddles, light enough not to burden the horse, but sturdy enough to give good support to the rider and his gear. In it’s original form the seat was covered with rawhide instead of leather, and when the original covering split, the seat became very uncomfortable for the rider. It featured a thick leather skirt, leather covering for wooden stirrups (to keep out rain and cold, and provide limited protection from rocks and brush for hard to replace boots); in addition, a girth strap made of woolen yarn. Added accessories to the saddle often included a nose bag for horse feed, a curry comb to groom the horse, a "picket pin" (driven into the ground) and lariat to tether the horse while grazing, saddlebags, and a "thimble" that held the muzzle of the cavalryman’s carbine. The McClellan saddle was placed on top of a saddlecloth, shabrack, or saddle blanket.

Many Confederate cavalrymen enlisted with their own horses and civilian saddles. In time the Confederacy issued the Jennifer saddle. But when Southerners’ horses grew thin because of the inadequate food supply, the Jennifer saddle became painful to the bony withers of the horses. In 1863 the Confederate army issued the lighter and better-contoured McClellan saddle to its cavalry. Because leather was scarce in the South during the Civil War, many of the McClellan saddles had skirts of painted canvas.

 

McClellan Saddles on display at the Drum Barracks

 

STRANGE FACT:

A man who never served a day in the cavalry and wrote the manuals, designed the saddle which became standard US cavalry issue throughout its history.

Floyd Farrar Drum Barracks Volunteer