What Are Horse Marines?
- The Texas Horse Marines were a group of about 30 mounted volunteers who scouted the Texas coastline in 1836 for Mexican troop landings during Texas' struggle for independence.
- From 1919 to 1933, the U.S. Marines were engaged in the "Banana Wars," a series of intense regional conflicts in Central American and Caribbean countries in support of U.S. interests. They rode and packed both horses and mules when moving through jungles and mountains.
- Beginning in 1907 as a courier and early warning system for the diplomatic community of Peking, U.S. Marines serving in China were called "Horse Marines" because they used mounted patrols and also rode Mongol ponies for ceremonies and crowd control. The detachment was disbanded in 1938, just before the Boxer Rebellion of 1900.
- The only remaining equestrian unit in the USMC today is the Mounted Color Guard based in Barstow, California. It was formed in 1967 and participates in equestrian events nationwide. The unit also appears at special events such as funerals and parades.
Texas Horse Marines
Horse Marines in Latin America
Horse Marines in China
Today's Horse Marines
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