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War Horse Documentary Filmed At The Horse Trust

12 years ago
2106 views

Posted
1st February, 2012 11h12


Santoy A film crew spent a day at equine sanctuary The Horse Trust filming a documentary on the use of horses in World War 1, for a programme that is due to be aired on Channel 4 on the 4th of March. The Horse Trust runs a sanctuary for rescued and retired working horses, ponies and donkeys, including retired Army horses, in Speen, Buckinghamshire. The one hour programme, called War Horse – The True Story and is to be televised on Sunday 4th March at 9pm on Channel 4 (date and time subject to change). The documentary, produced by Testimony Films, will cover the role and welfare of horses in World War 1, which will be contrasted with the present day use of horses in the military. Almost a million horses fought on the Western Front during the war, yet only about 60,000 returned to Britain, the rest either perished in the war, were sold in France as work horses, or were simply sold to French butchers. The Real War Horse programme will cover The Horse Trust's role in improving the welfare of horses during the war. The charity, which was then known as The Home of Rest for Horses, provided the first motorised horse ambulance to transport wounded horses in France from the front line during the First World War. According to the charity's 1916 Annual Report, in two years this ambulance travelled around 13,000 miles and carried in excess of 1,000 injured horses. The Home of Rest for Horses ambulance, which was the first of its kind worldwide, was so successful that the War Office commissioned additional horse ambulances. By the end of the war, 14 of these vehicles were in operation in France. The first equine war veteran retired to The Horse Trust’s Home of Rest for Horses in 1919 was San Toy, a horse that had served in both the Boer and First World Wars and was joined by a number of other WWI Veterans including Roger. Roger’s story was truly remarkable. A German Cavalry horse, thought to have been a German Officer’s Charger, Roger was found rider-less on the battlefield during the infamous battle of the Somme by a British Army Officer who caught him, got him to safety and at the end of the war brought him back to England to retire to the Home of Rest. "The hard work and sacrifice of horses in the Great War is all to easily forgotten, overshadowed by the tragic deaths of nearly a million men of Britain and her Empire on the Western Front. And yet the war could not have been fought without those brave and dependable animals who suffered daily hardships every bit as much as the soldiers they served," said George Pagliero, Director of Testimony Films. "In all that inhumanity there were those who never forgot; those who campaigned tirelessly to raise funds for equine welfare even while the guns were still blazing; terrific work that gave wounded horses a chance of survival in the hell that was the Great War. This work is continued by The Horse Trust to the present day and is something they can rightly be proud of." The documentary crew also filmed a World War 1 wagon being pulled by horses in the fields at the Home of Rest for Horses to demonstrate the strain and impact this work would have had on the horses during the war. The wagon was provided by the Royal Logistics Corps Museum in Camberley, while the horses - two black Dutch Friesian horses called Harry and Major - were provided by Funeral Directors T Cribb & Sons. These funeral horses were chosen as they are approximately the same size as the draught horses that would have pulled carts in World War 1 battlefields. "We're really excited to be featured in this documentary on the welfare of horses in the First World War. As the oldest horse charity in the world, we have been focusing on the welfare of horses for 125 years," said Jeanette Allen, Chief Executive of The Horse Trust. "We hope this documentary will raise awareness of the vital role that working horses play - both in the past and present day - and the importance of safeguarding their welfare." The Horse Trust depends on the support of the public to offer retirement to working horses. It costs the charity an average of £12 per day to look after each horse at the sanctuary, which includes the costs of grooms, forage, farriery and veterinary care. To donate to The Horse Trust, please visit www.horsetrust.org.uk, or contact the charity on 01494 488 464 or [email protected]

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