If you want to have a good time, jine the cavalry!
Jine the cavalry! Jine the cavalry!
If you want to catch the Devil, if you want to have fun,
… jine the cavalry!
-- Popular American Civil War song
Perhaps it was “to catch the Devil, [or] to have fun,” or perhaps it was that he believed, as Frederick the Great and the British Army did, that its role was to "add tone to what would otherwise be just a vulgar brawl." Perhaps it was the celebrated role that it played in the westward expansion of his native country. Whatever the reason, Alf Leonard enlisted in the United States Cavalry in 1917.
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| Alf Leonard in US Army uniform with an as-yet-unidentified woman, possibly his sister Bessie Agnes Turgeon, née Leonard, listed as his next-of-kin. |
Exactly when he did is a matter of conjecture due to conflicting primary documents. In 1946, Leonard gave the date of his enrollment as 25 December, Christmas Day, 1917. In 1965, however, he gave an earlier date: 20 January 1917, 72 days before American President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare war on Germany. The change in the date is significant for several reason, not the least being that the Selective Service Act of 1917, which authorized the American government to raise an army for service in the First World War through the conscription, was not enacted until 18 May of that year, the first draft taking place on 5 June, the day before Leonard’s birthday. As a seventeen years old, Leonard would not have been eligible for compulsory service, though his enlistment before any reasonable expectation of being drafted speaks to his patriotism and his character. Whether he had been conscripted or not is, of course, irrelevant: the 2.8 million Americans who were drafted served their country during the Great War just as much as the 2 million Americans who volunteered.
Sometime after enlisting at North Adams, Massachusetts, Leonard joined the troopers of the 15th Cavalry Regiment. The 15th Cavalry had been formed in 1901, participating in pacification campaigns in the Philippines and Cuba before joining Major General John Joseph "Black Jack" Pershing’s expedition against Mexican revolutionary Francisco "Pancho" Villa. It would have been during this campaign that Leonard joined the regiment.
After Congress declared “That the state of war between the United States and the Imperial German Government…” existed, the 15th Cavalry embarked with the American Expeditionary Force to France. The troopers of the 15th -- along with the 2nd, 3rd and 6th Cavalry Regiments -- were among the only AEF soldiers to go into battle on horseback. While 28 additional cavalry regiments had been formed during mobilization, the stalemate within the quagmire of the Western Front in which the Allied forces had found themselves for almost four years had little use for horses except for draught animals, and the vast majority of the American cavalry had been converted artillery formations.
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| Troopers of the US 15th Cavalry, circa 1917 |
Unfortunately for troopers dreaming of chivalry and glory, the day of the noble cavalry charge, if it ever existed, had passed. There were a few mounted engagements on the Western Front: 400 officers and men of the US 2nd Cavalry rode five miles behind the German lines before being routed in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel; seven months earlier, Canadian Lieutenant Gordon Flowerdew led a squadron of Lord Strathcona’s Horse in a charge against five German infantry companies supported by artillery battery, losing over half of his troopers and his own life but gaining the field and the Victoria Cross in what has been termed "The Last Great Cavalry Charge.” The 15th, however, dismounted and served alongside infantry units in the trenches, not getting back in the saddle until the end of the war. The regiment transferred to the US 3rd Army, formed to provide forces for the Allied occupation of the Rhineland, where it served until June 1919, after which it returned to the United States. Leonard left the regiment shortly thereafter, being discharged from the army on 24 June 1919 at Camp Devins, Massachusetts.
The end of the war caused significant upheaval in American society: a nation which had committed itself to a total war industry suddenly found itself with a massive labour surplus, exacerbated by the rapid demobilization of almost five million men, caused tremendous unemployment. This could be why, no later than the 1930s, Leonard found himself bound northward for the small village in Northern Ontario where he would spend the rest of his life.

















