The McClellan saddle was a riding saddle designed by George B. McClellan, a career Army officer in the U.S. Army, after his tour of Europe as the member of a military commission charged with studying the latest developments in engineer and cavalry forces including field equipment. Based on his observations, McClellan's proposed a design that was adopted by the Army in 1859. The McClellan saddle was a long lasting success and continued in continuous use, in various forms, from the period of its adoption until the U.S. Army's last horse cavalry and horse artillery was dismounted in World War Two. Today, the McClellan saddle continues to be used by ceremonial mounted units in the U.S. Army. The saddle also saw use by several other nations, including Rhodesia and Mexico, and even to a degree by the British in the Boer War
Under the leadership of US Secretary of War, the brilliant, energetic and yet erratic Jefferson Davis, the McClellan saddle was adopted by the U.S. War Department in 1859 and remained standard issue, in various models, for the remaining history of the horse cavalry. The original M1859 variant was the form of the saddle used during the Civil War, and the saddle saw subsequent modifications thereafter. Still, the saddle always remained recognizable as McClellan's saddle, and included cavalry and artillery models. Even a model for packers was introduced at one time, as the M1913.
Still, the saddle did see some modification over time. The modifications were never so great as to keep an observer from recognizing the saddle as a McClellan saddle, but they did occur. Perhaps the most significant alterations to the saddle occured in the 20th Century, when the rigging was changed twice. The first time, an adjustable rigging was adopted leading to the M1904 McClellan. That pattern is the most common of all McClellan saddles, and continued in use throughout World War One and World War Two.
However, increased emphasis on equitation in the U.S. Army also lead to the M1928, which was a M1904 with English rigging and fenders. This variant, the final one in U.S. service, fit closer than other McClellan saddles, and is still used by the U.S. Army in ceremonial uses.
The saddle, while bearing the test of time, was not without its rivals or critics. The first significant challenger was the Whitman saddle, designed by a former U.S. Army officer of that last name. The Whitman had many McClellan features, and is often mistaken for the McClellan. While not supplanting it, it was approved for use by officers, and remained an approved officer saddle throughout World War One. In later years it incorporated so many McClellan features that it is known as the "Whitman-McClellan."
In the 20th Century a serious effort was made to replace the McClellan with the test of the U.S. Army's M1912 equipments. The M1912 saddle would prove to be unsuccessful in the Punitive Expedition, but it demonstrated a very great departure from the McClellan design, resembling, in some ways, the British Universal Pattern saddle. Subsequently, the Army would test the M1917 saddle, which was not adopted.
Enormous quantities of M1904 McClellans were purchased by the U.S. Army in World War One, effectively preventing any new saddle from being adopted for general use for decades. The U.S. Army, however, did approve a saddle of the English saddle type prior to WWI for officers, and after the war approved another one with the adoption of the Philip's saddle for officers.
The saddle continues to be made in the United States and was a saddle used by endurance riders at one time. Presently, it is made for use as a pleasure saddle for those few who like to use it in that fashion, and as a saddle for reenactors.
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