Units
Strathcona's Horse
Trooper, Strathconas Horse in South Africa. This image
strikingly shows why Strathconas Horse, perhaps more than any
other unit in South Africa, became identified with the popular image of
the Canadian cowboy.
On 10 January 1900, Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, the Canadian
High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, offered to raise a regiment at
his own expense for service in the British Army in South Africa. The
Imperial authorities accepted his offer and thus was born one of the
more unusual regiments of the South African War. While officially a
British unit, the distinction was lost on the Canadian public,
politicians, and the men serving in its ranks. It could hardly have
been otherwise, as the unit was recruited entirely in the Canadian West.
It was equipped by the Canadian government, quartered in Lansdowne Park,
Ottawa, and paraded on Parliament Hill. The men cut impressive figures,
resplendent in wide-brimmed Stetsons, and mounted on cow ponies with
western saddles and lassos.
The unit was known as Strathcona's Horse. It was made up of three
quadrons recruited in Manitoba, the territories that would later become
the provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta, and British Columbia. A cadre
of mounted police joined Strathcona's Horse, among them the commanding
officer, the legendary Superintendent
Sam Steele.
Strathcona's Horse arrived in Cape Town on 10 April 1900, and was
delayed there by an outbreak of disease among its horses. Finally, in
June, the regiment joined General Buller's Natal Field Force and took
part in the clearing of the Boer forces from that colony, and also in
operations intended to link up with the main army in the Transvaal. On 5
July, at Wolve Spruit, a member of the unit,
Sergeant Arthur Richardson,
won the Victoria Cross for rescuing a wounded and unhorsed comrade.
The regiment experienced a considerable amount of hard fighting
during the remainder of its tour of operations. In January 1901, the
Canada-bound unit stopped in London where the new monarch, King Edward
VII, personally presented its members with their South African campaign
medals, while Lord Strathcona proudly looked on.
Map Indicating the
Movement of the Strathcona's Horse, 20 June - 1 September 1900