Charybdis wrote:USMA74 wrote: . . .
Note that there is no listing for horse cavalry units. The U.S. Army hasn't had horse cavalry as TOE units (vice table of distribution allowances organizations like the 1st Cavalry Division's horse cavalry platoon) since 1947.
... extract from the 1985 FM 25-5, Training for Mobilization and War. Raiding your bookcase?
So ... whose ghost should be invoked from OWL's memory banks? In terms of horse cavalry, it would be hard to choose from any but the American Civil War as it was the last large, strategic conflict with full use of cavalry, although one might summon 'Black Jack' Pershing for his early years in the American Southwest and Mexico. Still, from the ACW, would one choose Stuart, Hampton, Grierson, Forrest or Sheridan?
The Red Army made more than a little use of cavalry in the Russian Civil War; I assume the Whites made at least as much. And the Red Army organized and used some genuine horse cavalry units (though I'm not at all sure they didn't fight as mounted infantry) in between the loss of so many armored vehicles in 1941 and the recovery of them in '42, '43.
Mind you, certainly the latter case won't count for your "full use".
But still, on Safehold now, it's hard for me at least to see a good use of cavalry in a theater against modern opposition that doesn't amount to mounted infantry. The best case I can think of - and it's not clear that 'cavalry' remains a good word for it - is frequently mounted scouts and rifle-armed, dismounted-fighting raiders. And that's marginal vs. purely dismounted scout/raiders.