This past spring, I wrote about a horse called Warrior who defied the odds and lived through the horrors of WWI. Warrior, called the horse the Germans couldn’t kill, arrived on the Western Front in 1914 and lived through gunfire and artillery bombardment.
Earlier this fall, at the Imperial War Museum of London, the late Warrior was awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry and his contribution to the war effort.
Read about Warrior’s Victoria Cross presentation given to author Brough Scott, grandson of Warrior’s owner and rider General Jack Seely.