Three million horses and mules served during the Civil War. Approximately half lost their lives. Horses and mules were essential to both armies; moving artillery, cavalry, the wounded and supplies. Almost 32,000 horses and mules served in the Battle of Stones River, and nearly 3000 were killed, disabled or captured.
![]() NPS Feeding horses and mules presented a bigger logistical challenge than feeding men. The daily feed ration for Union cavalry horses was ten pounds of hay and fourteen pounds of grain. A soldier’s daily ration weighed a little more than four pounds. ![]() Library of Congress ![]() Library of Congress ![]() NPS
Many soldiers felt deep grief when their horses died and wrote touching accounts in their diaries. “…my little bay horse had his hind leg nearly torn off by a piece of shell that seemed to burst six feet of my face. At the order to retire I remounted him and his last act of service was to carry me out of danger. … As the faithful animal stood there bleeding and shivering in pain, and I powerless to help him in return … I could not prevent the unmanly moisture in my eyes, and when we drove off and left him, I could not have felt it more keenly had I been leaving a wounded human friend.” William A. Brown, Confederate Mississippi Stanford Battery ![]() Chester Johnson |