The last cavalry charge

While talking history with a friend last night, the following questions came up:
When and where was the last “classical” massed horse cavalry charge? Was it succesful? If not, when was the last succesful one?

I think the Polish Army carried out several cavalry charges against the invading German army in 1939.They were not a success.I also think the British army carried out some charges in WW1.One was in the last few minutes before the end of hostilities on the 11th.November 1918.Several men were killed because of this foolish gesture.

I’m not sure what you’d class as “classical” but I’d put the claim for “the last successful cavalry charge” to be the Battle for Beersheba 31st October 1917. It was a bayonet charge by mounted infantry of the Australian 3rd & 9th Light Horse Regiments http://www.lighthorse.org.au/histbatt/beersheba.htm

While I ran into many a mention of Beersheba, it should be noted that Polish cavalry action against German infantry in 1939 was successful.

From The Legacy of the Horse:

That unfortunatley both lacks details and includes a reference to the Polish cavalry charging German tanks, something that another site, The Polish Campaign 1939, describes as myth:

I found several other references describing Polish cavalry fighting panzers as myth.

Not a charge, just an interesting side note from the History of the 11th U.S.Cavalry (whose last charge was against Poncho Villa’s bandits):

And then I stumbled upon this tidbit from here:

The same mailing list turned up this:

Well I found out nothing more about either of those, but the following turned up at LESSER KNOWN FACTS OF WW II:

The Poles, for the most part, really weren’t charging. They had been encricled and it was a breakout action. Casualties were high but it was a success.

Cavalry was in use in WW2, especially on the Eastern front, but it was more for transport than for fighting.

The Poles did have some cavalry regiments as WWII broke out – but this was a sensible move against infantry in flat, open country, rather than simply preserving a foolish antiquated tradition. With very few exceptions (DeGaulle being one), very few army leaders in any country were prepared for what modern (sc. vintage 1940) tanks en masse could do at the time.

The “Polish cavalry charging German tanks” thing is something of an urban legend, but was founded on (a) apparently a couple of situations where a cavalry formation was surrounded – I hadn’t been aware of these, but someone noted them above, and (b) a disastrous but intelligently founded move by a cavalry commander resulting from faulty intelligence.

Background: in the early days of the Third Reich, the people being trained to run Panzers and such were placed in “jeeps” (technical misuse, but you get the idea – open bodied off-road vehicles on an auto chassis) encased in tank-shaped plywood, since the Wehrmacht was training people faster than the factories could as yet turn out tanks. This would at least give tank drivers practice in running a vehicle of that size and shape, if not the right weight or properly armed. (The sight of such forces in operation also was a useful propaganda tool for Goebbels.)

The commander of the Pomorze cavalry regiment was aware of this, and also had some faulty intelligence (possibly planted?) that the Germans did not have enough tanks to cover the full front of their invasion of Poland, and were using the old “fake tanks” in areas of the front, including his, as a psychological ploy to force the Poles to retreat. Since a crack cavalry regiment, well disciplined, mobile, and good fighters, could easily take on a motorized force impeded by goofball plywood tank-shaped camouflage, he calculated that he had a reasonable chance of defeating them, and charged.

The tanks were real, and deadly. And shortly, his regiment was neither.

But not for an idle gesture. Because a competent commander relied on false intelligence, and misjudged fatally.

Remember, too, that up until WWII, horses were considerably more reliable than tanks or other motorized vehicles.

Dave Cronan made reference to a British cavalry charge near the end of the Great War. I think the incident to which he refers is the charge of the Lord Strathcona’s Horse, a Canadian cavalry regiment (still in existence), during the bleak retreat of British forces in the face of Ludendorff’s March 1918 offensive. Two interesting features to this incident: a Victoria Cross was won, and swords were used–surely one of the very few times during WWI that this occurred.

Lieutenant (that’s leftenant, of course) Gordon Muriel Flower dew led a cavalry charge against German trenches, during which he was mortally wounded (and lost a very high proportion of his troop). His citation for the Victoria Cross, published in the London Gazette as a matter of public record, reads:

I note that despite inflicting very heavy casualties on the horse troops, the Germans “broke and retired.”

The last cavalry charge of the Great War is most likely the November 4, 1918 action by Italian bicycle-mounted troops of the 4th Squadon, Aquila Cavalleria, who attacked Austrian positions along a road outside of a small village named–ironically–“Paradiso.” The attack failed due to Austrian machine-gun fire.

I’m not too sure of what your definition of a classical cavalry charge is but wasn’t there an article in “National Geographic” or another magazine recently about Afgani soldiers on horseback?

Cavalry, that is horse-mounted units, were used by the Soviets in WWII, but the horses were transportation, not the weapon. Cavalry was also used in Africa, notably in the Portuguese colony of Angola during the post-WWII period. The last use of cavalry in the classic Napoleonic shock tactics sense was probably in Syria and Palestine during WWI.

Other than ceremonial units like the Life Guard and Blues of the British Army, I am not aware of any tactical horse-mounted units. The Italian Army has a spectacular ceremonial horse unit. Before anyone starts giggling, please note that in the 20th Century, the Italians were the leading innovators in military horsemanship. Bill Malding has a great cartoon showing and old cavalry first sergeant holding a pistol to the hood of a broken-axle jeep.

A number of minor questions…

What is the modern equivalnt of a cavalry charge?

Bicycle-mounted troops: I’ve read of these in HG Wells, but do they now exist? Would they now be motorcycle-mounted troops? Possibly on what we used to call ‘scrambler’ bikes?

Bicycle mounted troops weren’t unusual in World War II, particularly in the early stages. At least the Germans and Japanese had bicycle infantry regiments, I’m sure. It must be a cheap and easy way of making your troops mobile.

A few years ago I did read about a cavalry charge literally in the last couple of hours before the cease-fire came into force on 11th.November 1918. It was carried out by a small force of cavalry troops and several were killed.It seems that it was an ego-trip by the officer in charge who wanted to end his war on a note of glory.

The Soviets did occasionally use cavalry in combat. The Red Army’s 44th Mongolian Cavalry Division launched a horseback attack against the German 107th Infantry Division on 17 Novemeber 1941. The Soviets hoped that the Germans would be demoralized by the sub-zero weather and the unexpected attack, but they defended themselves well and the Mongolians were wiped out.

Switzerland is in the process of disbanding its bicycle cavalry, which has been around for decades, and lasted longer than it’s horse-mounted cavalry.

Thanks for the info guys.

I was just thinking a motorcycle cavalry might be effective. I guess if it was it would be used already, though…

I beleive the Rhodesians used horse cavalary against their opponents from time to time, with good results. Of course, they eventually lost the war.

The Red Chinese once put out a film in which they showed gas-mask type protection they had made for their horses and mounted troops. The film shows a charge made with the horses and men all in their chemical suits. The cavalarymen were using AK-47s.

In the book “Blitzkrieg” Len Dieghton points out the fact of how much the German army was dependant on horses all through The Second World War,much more than any other army.The main use was for transportation of troops and material even up to the front line.He points out one drawback of horses over trucks-that of fuel.If you don’t use a truck for a few days it does not need any fuel.A horse,on the other hand,needs to be watered and fed every day even if its not doing any work.So you have to provide more transport just for horse feed.The horses on the Eastern Front also suffered from the extreme conditions ,even more than the troops.

In the Italian campaign in Abbyssinia (now Ethiopia) in the late 1930s (1937 I think) there were cavalry actions of the kind you mention.