Doctrine and Reform in the British Cavalry 18801918
A prevalent view among historians is that both horsed cavalry and the cavalry charge became obviously obsolete in the second half of the nineteenth century in the face of increased infantry and artillery firepower, and that officers of the cavalry clung to both for reasons of prestige and stupidity. It is this view, commonly held but rarely supported by sustained research, that this book challenges. It shows that the achievements of British and Empire cavalry in the First World War, although controversial, are sufficient to contradict the argument that belief in the cavalry was evidence of military incompetence. It offers a case study of how in reality a practical military doctrine for the cavalry was developed and modified over several decades, influenced by wider defence plans and spending, by the experience of combat, by Army politics, and by the rivalries of senior officers.
Debate as to how the cavalry was to adjust its tactics in the face of increased infantry and artillery firepower began in the mid nineteenth century, when the increasing size of armies meant a greater need for mobile troops. The cavalry problem was how to deal with a gap in the evolution of warfare between the mass armies of the later nineteenth century and the motorised firepower of the mid twentieth century, an issue that is closely connected with the origins of the deadlock on the Western Front. Tracing this debate, this book shows how, despite serious attempts to learn from history, both European-style wars and colonial wars produced ambiguous or disputed evidence as to the future of cavalry, and doctrine was largely a matter of what appeared practical at the time.
About the author
Stephen Badsey is Reader in Conflict Studies at the University of Wolverhampton. He was educated at King Edwards School Birmingham and Cambridge University, where he was awarded a PhD in 1982; and he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 1995. Further information can be found at his website www.stephenbadsey.com
First published 2008 by Ashgate Publishing
Published 2016 by Routledge
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Badsey, Stephen
Doctrine and reform in the British cavalry 18801918. (Birmingham studies in First World
War history) 1. Great Britain. Army Cavalry History
I. Title
357.184094109034
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Badsey, Stephen.
Doctrine and reform in the British cavalry 18801918 / By Stephen Badsey.
p. cm. (Birmingham Studies in First World War history)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-7546-6467-3 (alk. paper)
1. Great Britain. ArmyCavalryHistory. I. Title.
UA654.B34 2008
357.184094109034dc22
2007045483
ISBN 9780754664673 (hbk)
The British Army of the Great War has been the subject of much criticism and abuse over the years. In sections of the British press and in the numerous popular accounts of the war, the army remains unrehabilitated. Its generals are dismissed as callous butchers, its soldiers sentimentalised or despised as passive victims. But in academic circles there has been a transformation. This was begun by Bidwell & Grahams Firepower (1982), which abandoned the sterile debate about the alleged professional and moral failings of senior British commanders and inaugurated the analysis of the British army as an institution. This resulted in a greater understanding of how the army confronted and eventually overcame the challenges of the Great War. There is now general acceptance that the army underwent a learning curve, though learning process might be a more appropriate phrase. Although there remains debate and disagreement over the cause, pace and effectiveness of the process, much of it focused on the still-controversial record of Sir Douglas Haig, there is a measure of agreement that the army was transformed from the small colonial police force of 1914 arguably at least into the best army in the world by the second half of 1918. The armys training, equipment, command and control, tactical evolution, logistics, artillery, discipline, leadership and morale, and eventual all arms co-operation have been the subject of revisionist studies. One branch of the army, however, remains unredeemed by this new orthodoxy, the British cavalry.
Cavalry, even in the writings of otherwise revisionist scholars, still functions as shorthand for the amateurism and traditionalism that the army was forced to abandon during the war. The cavalry could never be part of this process because it was useless and irrelevant on the modern, industrialised battlefield. For too long the principal challenge to these views has been found in Dr Stephen Badseys Cambridge PhD thesis Fire and Sword: The British Army and the Arme Blanche Controversy, 18711921 (1982). When Dr Badsey accepted my invitation to become a Member of the Birmingham Centre for First World War Studies, I queried why his thesis had never been published. When no satisfactory answer was forthcoming I said that I should like to publish it as the first of the Birmingham Studies in First World War History series. Dr Badsey happily agreed, went away to revisit his text, extending and updating it in the light of subsequent research. The resulting book is a tour de force . Its focus is on the reform of the British cavalry in the years before the outbreak of the Great War and its continued utility during the war. Badseys scholarship establishes the cavalry as a centre of professionalism and innovation with a clear understanding of the firepower revolution. It will no longer be possible to airbrush the cavalry out of the operational history of the Great War or to use it as a prop to sustain discredited incompetence myths. Read on.
John Bourne
Director of the Centre for First World War Studies
The University of Birmingham