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A Horse of a Different Color: Carriage Horses Are Neither War Horses Nor Work Horses


Elizabeth Forel / May 20, 2012 / 88 Comments


A Horse of a Different Color: Carriage Horses Are Neither War Horses Nor Work Horses

Horses have always been the innocent victims – whether taken to war without a choice and worked to death; or used in rodeos, horse racing or New York City’s  inhumane horse-drawn carriage industry.

Sad history – In the age before the automobile, horses were notoriously overworked, and many died in the streets.  In NYC, they pulled wagons loaded with people and goods, and they served as the power for the City’s street trolley system.   Between 100,000 and 200,000 horses lived in the city at the turn of the century.  Many were literally worked to death — their carcasses left on the street waiting for the street cleaners.  From an article by Joel A. Tarr in American Heritage Magazine – Urban Pollution – many long years ago  “The average streetcar nag had a life expectancy of barely two years, and it was a common sight to see drivers and teamsters savagely lashing their overburdened animals.  The mistreatment of city horses was a key factor in moving Henry Bergh to found the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in 1866.”  

Steven Spielberg’s film War Horse gave me new insight into what the term “work horse” and “war horse”   really meant.  During World War I, horses were transported via rail to New York City to be shipped to Europe for use in the war.  They pulled cannons, trucks and ambulances and were literally worked till they dropped in the ravages of war and hand-to-hand combat. Hundreds of thousands of horses did not make it out alive, dying from artillery fire, starvation and disease. With the end of the war, and with increased mechanization in the 20th century, the need for draft horses declined.  Many of these horses were sold to slaughter.

Humans had contributed to the overpopulation of draft horses by over breeding, cross breeding and selective breeding.  Mules are man made – the hybrid offspring of a female horse and a male donkey.   So are hinnies – a combination of a male horse and female donkey.  A 2008 article from Horseman Magazine says “Most draft horses however were really the result of selective breeding. Programs for breeding were primarily set up to produce these large, muscular and powerful horses.”

Watching “War Horse” provided a window into the ways our society has treated horses through the years.  Horses were domesticated by humans who needed their strength to perform a variety of duties that they were unable to do.  And horses, being the docile animals that they are, complied.    They became known as “beasts of burden” as if this and nothing else described what they were.

Our use of horses over the millenia is nothing to be proud of – the devastation of war; the exploitation of animals – but people felt they had no choice.  Real work needed to be done, and powerful horses were available and capable.   Today, we don’t need to use horses to work for us.  We have a choice, and can and must choose not to exploit them.

Where do they go? - Among the most abused work horses today are those who pull carriages with tourists in major urban areas like New York, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia,  Charleston, Atlanta and Rome.  In New York, these horses are forced to haul tourists through the congested streets of midtown.     When no longer able to do this pulling, they are removed from the business.    Unconfirmed rumors abound concerning their engraved hoof identification numbers being sanded off so they can’t be identified as a NYC carriage horse when they are in the auction kill pen.  Freedom of Information requests from the  Department of Health reveal a very high turnover of carriage horses – between 60 and 70  a year – about 1/3 of the total horses.   Auctions are the likely place to sell them and recoup costs.  When a horse is sold outside the City, as most are, records are not required to be sent to the Department of Health – only eventual notification that the horse is no longer in the system so the driver does not have to pay the license fee. Although the industry has taken advantage of the NYC landscape to ply their trade, the drivers are not accountable for where the horses go, and the City has never seen fit to change that, despite pleas from advocates who believe they deserve a humane retirement.  There is no transparency in this trade although they benefit from it being a cash only business with few meaningful restrictions.

It has long been suspected that many of these horses are “laundered” with the help of some Amish farmers who essentially act as middlemen.  They will take the horse directly to auction so the blame for the horse ending up in the kill pen is not traced back to the carriage operator.  A perfect example of how this played out was with Bobby II Freedom, a former NYC carriage horse jointly rescued by the Coalition to Ban Horse-Drawn Carriages and Equine Advocates in 2010.  Every year more than 100,000 equines are transported from the US across the Mexican and Canadian borders where they are slaughtered for human consumption and shipped to in Europe and Japan.

The horse of a different color - The present day urban carriage horses are not work horses although the drivers like to pretend they are.  That term needs to be reserved for horses who helped their owners survive before the industrial revolution.  Instead, they  are entertainment horses – they are horses of a different color.  They are often decorated with feathered head dresses, some with glittered body paint and painted hoofs.  Undignified –  a tawdry decoration to attract tourists.

A work horse would pull a plough to till the earth so the farmer could plant seeds and feed his family.  A carriage horse pulls unsuspecting tourists around a city to see the sights,  and according to a recent article in the NY Post, they often get ripped off. These tourists don’t know about cruelty and safety issues, and the carriage drivers certainly aren’t informing them.

A typical day – By law, a NYC carriage horse may work a punishing nine hours a day, seven days a week.  Throughout their long shifts, they are confined between the shafts of their carriage wearing heavy equipment, blinders and a metal bit in their mouths.   During the holiday season, the horses are worked to exhaustion.  The current law requires a 15 minute break every two hours, but it is not enforced.   At other times customers are scarce, the horse stands on the hack line, often ignored by her driver whose attention is elsewhere. She is frequently bored, either mentally shutting down and appearing  dispirited,  or repeatedly pawing / pounding her hoof on the pavement.  It is a form of displacement behavior on which the horse eventually becomes stereotyped.  Restricted by the carriage, she has no freedom of movement.  She is not even able to scratch an itch.

Laws not enforced – Although it is against the law in NYC for horses to be left untethered or unattended, it is a common practice.     In 2007, a horse named Smoothie was attached to her empty carriage waiting unattended at Central Park South when she was spooked by a loud noise.  Frantic, she bolted, got her legs tangled in the carriage and ended up crashing into a tree and dying.  Another horse who saw Smoothie bolt also spooked and ran into traffic, crashing into a car.

On October 28, 2011,  an unattended horse spooked on Central Park South near Columbus Circle, bolting into traffic and ending up in the park where he crashed into the wall.  He is reported to no longer be in the business.

Carriage drivers like to characterize themselves as the experts, the “real horsemen”; this is a thinly veiled and polarizing tactic designed to suggest that anyone who wants to see this business come to an end in the large cities lacks knowledge. They take this line of reasoning even further, stating that proponents of a ban “know nothing about horses” and that the carriage horses–all horses, in fact–need a job. This, of course, is a human concept.

Having knowledge of horses does not equate with treating them well or knowing what is best for them.  Michael Vick knew about dogs, and look how he treated them.  When people make money off the back of a horse or any other animal, their first priority is invariably profit. One does not have to know a fetlock from the withers to know that enslaving these horses and shackling them to a carriage for hours on end is inhumane and is all about what the driver wants – not the horse.

Jobs or respect?  As for needing a job – this is just an excuse to keep the horses working in the carriage business.  Our focus is on urban, commercial / tourist carriage businesses in cities like New York – nothing else.   Horses have highly developed social relationships  and need mental and physical stimulation.  They are exceedingly social animals and should have the opportunity to graze in a pasture in the company of other equines  – something that is denied to them as a carriage horse.

New York City needs to move into the 21st century and stop pretending that this is a big tourist draw or that it provides lots of revenue to the city.  It is not and it does not.  Horse-drawn carriages pose a danger for the horses, their passengers, other vehicles and pedestrians.

It’s way past time to end this cruel and inhumane anachronism.  We hope that time will come in the next few years with the passage of the Avella/Rosenthal  bill  to ban horse-drawn Carriages, which is currently in the New York State legislature.

Image Source r0sss/Flickr


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88 Responses to “A Horse of a Different Color: Carriage Horses Are Neither War Horses Nor Work Horses”

  1. avatar Jayne says:

    Elizabeth Forel says: After browsing through the comments, I pulled out these gems. And BTW – I will not be commenting again about what you say. It is not worth my time.

    chicken. afraid of the supporters are you?

  2. avatar Jayne says:

    Wait…you are using War Horse as an example of where to get your eyes opened? What?! A totally fictional story?

    that’s as stupid as saying the horses in NYC are abused. Been there, seen them, and I *am* a horseman, who rides and trains and uses my horses. The carriage industry in NYC is a high class operation.

    • avatar elizabeth says:

      High class operation…like I said a person who can’t see the harm put upon these horses that are foced into the streets of NYC are totally blind! and they will never, never see the harm that they are doing.

  3. avatar Karen a BSE Volunteer says:

    I am appalled that people who have no idea what they are talking about consistently believe liars. In this case people who are upset with Blue Star Equiculture (BSE for short) because they weren’t allowed to do just anything they wanted to the horses. One case is an adult who as told to leave because he was offering alcohol to minors, and another who is demanding a horse that doesn’t belong to them, and the list goes on and on and these are the people you choose to believe.
    I have been a volunteer at BSE for almost 2 years now. It is an amazing sanctuary / rescue and if you’d bother to visit and see for yourself instead of believing viscous gossip you know that. It is not over crowed with horses by any means. BSE was setup to only allow 30 horses because they know that is all they can care for correctly. These are the most loving horses and people you’ll ever find anywhere. There are young people who are taught how to handle horses and care for them. What is wrong with that?
    The people who spread lies are coming to an end. One day you’re going to have to prove what you’re saying. By “proving” I do mean in a court of law which doesn’t take gossip, photo – shopped posters, and insane Radial Animal Rights Activist conspiracy theories.

  4. avatar marie says:

    One thing abusers do well is travel in groups. Like all bullies, they need the support of their gang. It’s evident from the replies that this brutally frank and factual article has struck a nerve with these pathetic individuals who make their living on the suffering of non-human animals. In the absence of any defense to this horrid practice, they throw smoke screens and attempt to discredit the messenger. It’s not working. A retirement home for horses??!! They are really getting desperate to defend their cruelty.

  5. avatar elizabeth says:

    I am so tired of people who can’t see the harm to these horses that are being forced to work in the streets of NYC. I guess the only real reason they don’t see this as abusive is because they themselves are abusive! I mean if they can compare a horse out in the field to a horse being forced into the streets of NYC, then there is no way to get them to see the difference. They have the blinders on!

    We see more and more people coming out of the woodwork that feel that all creatures should be something they can use that will benefit them. This is just dead wrong. We are not privileged in any way, and we do not own these creatures. They don’t owe us anything. If we can’t do it ourselves then by God we have to live with that, but to continue to using these beautiful horses or any other creatures only shows the difference between good and evil. And no one will ever get these abusers to change, they love the act of cruelty!

    So the people who know what these innocent horses go through will continue to make a difference and get these horses off the streets of NYC and then the abusers will continue to keep them there!

    • avatar Anonymous says:

      elizabeth,
      It sounds like you think the ideal life for a horse would be for it to be out in a field of nice grass. If you believe that then you are very uniformed about horses and their dietary needs. Many horses would founder if put in a field of grass. My trainer’s horse would founder so badly that she would have to be put down. If you do not know what founder (or laminitis) is, I suggest you look it up and see the hellish end that you would unwittingly, in you ignorance, subject a horse to.

  6. avatar Holly Cheever, DVM says:

    As a veterinarian who assisted in investigating NYC carriage horse abuses from 1988-1995, (and on-going), and has also advised approximately 15 municipalities on carriage horse protection and bans (for those lucky cities with no current tourist trade), as well as advising Philadelphia in the creation of its urban carriage horse regulations, I support Elizabeth Forel’s article. NYC has the worst track record in the country in terms of horse injury/spooking/death, and also has the least humane stabling with no daily “turn out” and with some barns incarcerating their horses on 2nd and 3rd floors of decrepit stables, where the horses suffer from extreme heat and malodor in the summertime.
    Manhattan in 2012 is a very different from Manhattan at the turn of the 19th-20th centuries. Time to let this cruelty and anachronism go…..Let’s replace the horses who suffer by their mistreatment (and end at the killer sales, no matter how much the industry denies it) with electric antique cars that do NOT suffer and still entertain the tourists.

    • avatar CarriageHorseLover says:

      So you are an animal rights extremist and anti-carriage horse radical with a DVM– Big deal. There are plenty of other veterinarians who side with the carriage horse owners, and say that horses CAN be compatable with an urban setting. I can thing of several– they are the private vets who work with the NYC carriage horses. Go put that in your pipe and smoke it.

    • avatar LynnWood Farms says:

      Holly while I respect your wealth of school appropriated knowledge. Can I ask when was the last time you visited or inspected any of the barns that you’ve spoken of here ?

      I did notice that most of your work revolves around animal activism , working heavily with the HSUS and other animal welfare groups even PETA.

      Is it true are you a PETA supporter ? What about the HSUS?

      I do believe that in your case it seems that its difficult to write an unbiased medical based assessment when even in your on statement you clearly point out that you lobby against all urban carriage horses ” also advised approximately 15 municipalities on carriage horse protection and bans ”

      Does that ever cause conflict in your medical profession when you are asked to assess things that you are not in favor of in in the first place ..similar to the ASPCA whom we already know swayed Pam Corey DVM to write a statement laced with un truths about the results of Charlies Necropsy? I would assume that often your personal feelings might lean heavily on your medical need to be unbiased ?

    • avatar Eric Nix says:

      You are a liar! The N.Y. carriage safety record is one of the best in the Equine world!

  7. avatar ILUVHorses says:

    YumYum. Please stop carraige horses. More draft horses without jobs -more horse steak for me. They really do taste good with tartar sauce and a side of radish. Making them work gives them lean muscle, but I like mine tender. No horse should have a job, no human should have a job. We all should be in this planet to do whatever the heart desires and have a bunch of thrid world people do all the work for us, while we float on cloud 9. How is that working???

  8. avatar no calesas en cozumel says:

    Banned , this industry should be banned worldwide, a lot of cities have evolved and smartly have banned it.it doesn’t matter if is NY, Cozumel , Rome, or any city where horsedrawn carriages are used the situation of the horses is the same, so is the dangers for users and pedestrians.thanks to Elizabeth Forel for an exquisite article exposing the facts behind this so called touristic attraction. I was in december in NY and I didn’t see as many horsedrawn carriages been use as I thought as it was on the holidays, in cozumel tourists rarely use them too, sooner or later this activity will dissapear.tourists are not using them.i have to say that I saw horsedrawn carriages on the streets at 2 am , is this aloud? how many hours this horses had been working for?

  9. avatar Coyote Loco says:

    There will always be apologists for the abuse of those unable to defend themselves. Just look at what passes for logic in their rants: “the Amish are even worse than the carriage horse drivers,” “You can’t document more than one case of a a carriage horse sold at an auction — so that was the only case that ever happened,” “… They have all the water the want to drink… [where???]…” Shrill, irrational, but nevertheless consistent. I wonder if they get paid by the word for generating reams of rubbish.

    • avatar LynnWood Farms says:

      Well last I checked this is not NYClass. Don’t have to pay employees to provide support. Thank you for the segue to allow me to point that out. ~cheers~

    • avatar ILUVHorses says:

      You are so right. Poor horsies. They should be out in the fields , eating hay,being fed grain, have the vet attend every little scratch and do absolutely nothing, but just be. Perhaps you should contribute half your pay check and let them live the life they are supposed to live . perhaps you can contribute all of it and live in the barns and be a Mother Theresa of horses? Thou art a very noble being, an exalted spirit. It is a honor for us lowly beings to know you.

  10. avatar Elizabeth Forel says:

    The pro carriage horse posse is out in force – not unexpected and really such a yawn. Or is it just a few people with made up names posting over and over – easy to hide behind.

    When they do not like what I write, they say I am a liar and make things up. This is their defense. Anyone who disagrees with or criticizes them is said to “know nothing about horses.”

    But I still want to thank all of you so much for taking the time to read my article and commenting.

    After browsing through the comments, I pulled out these gems. And BTW – I will not be commenting again about what you say. It is not worth my time.

    Shelly says about me “She takes advantage of people who know nothing about horses, and often are incapable of critical thinking.” Really Shelly. How interesting. Actually the people who support a ban of the trade do exercise critical thinking and that is why they are opposed to the carriage business. Get it?

    Ann Wilkinson: – please stop now before you make a fool of yourself. You have no understanding for the way laws are enacted in this city – blaming it on the ASPCA when it is the carriage business that is behind it. They are responsible for much of the language in the laws and if they wanted to change the number of hours the law allows the horses to work, they could easily lobby their cronies on the City Council and it would get done. This business is probably the most regulated in the US. But it means NOTHING because many of the laws are inadequate and many are not enforced.

    CarriageHorseLover or Louisiana Lou: you would test anyone’s patience. Please shut up. Everyone has heard too much of your drivel.

    Ainsley says “I am dumbfounded…I really hope NOBODY actually believes one word in this article. Also, how do you put “an engraved hoof identification number” on a hoof?” Ainsley – you obviously do not live in NYC – so you need to be quiet also. Ask your carriage horse buddies about the 4-digit engraved ID hoof number. You are showing your ignorance.

    Carol Belfontaine says “Laws and regulations are stringent, and the poor carriage horse people are pursued relentlessly by the fanatics who want to destroy their livlihood and are looking for reasons to do so.” And this …” are required to take months of vacation a year, and that they often resting in lovely green fields more than the basic requirement?”
    As I told Ann above, the laws are insufficient and not adequately enforced. Even the ASPCA will admit to this. If you lived in NYC and had an open mind, you would know this. And about the 5-week vacation? The former ASPCA vet, Pam Corey, was quoted in a NY Post article in the fall of 2010 as saying that many of the horses return from this furlough looking worse than when they left. It was not investigated. Why? Let’s not forget that for 47 weeks out of the year, the horses most definitely do not have turnout to pasture.

    Victoria talks about the “official retirement home” for the carriage horses. Please explain why this official retirement home only has two NYC carriage horses. Where do all the others go?

    Eric Nix – another pro carriage groupie – stick to where you come from – you know nothing about this city.

    Alexandra – you too – stay away from something you know nothing about. I cited two accidents in my article – I did not say there were only two. We know of nine incidents since last July, 2010. It is all about reading comprehension. Please explain “anthropomorphized pathos” Sounds cool.

    • avatar CarriageHorseLover says:

      Lying Lizzie- I’ll “shut up” when you quit telling and posting LIES to support your anti-carriage horse obssion.For the truth about carriage and working horses see http://www.equiculture.com or go to Carriage Horse Facts or Carriage and Working Horses- The facts and Truth, both on facebook.

    • avatar CarriageHorseLover says:

      “Lying Lizzie”- I will “shut up” when you quit posting lies about carriage livery.

    • avatar Eric Nix says:

      Dizzy Lizzie, Your just mad because now, You cant censor out the facts!

  11. avatar jpeters says:

    Horse drawn carriages are dangerous for horses due to high heat, long hours, and traffic. They have no business in cities. Looking forward to the end of carriage horses being forced to drag fat tourists through exhaust-filled streets. They get little water, terrible shelter (in Philadelphia, carriage horses are kept under overpasses in temporary shelters), and little or no veterinary care. Please think about that before you hire one and use a trolley or bicycle rickshaw for your next tour.

    • avatar CarriageHorseLover says:

      The horse don’t “drag” any carriages– the carriages have wheels that turn. Gee, why do you hate tourists so much they you keep describing them as “fat”? That’s not very nice.

      If you don’t like the exhust-filled streets, they wny do you wnat to bann horse-drawn vehicles instead of MOTOR vehicles- you DO know that those nasty exhust fules come from the MOTOR vehicles and not the horse-drawn carriages, don’t you?

  12. avatar Fairfax aka Leo Maxwell says:

    Yes..the cat is out of the bag. Another latte drinking (whoops..not real milk from a cow of course) sterile condo living writer achieves her ultimate revenge on those who comune with nature. The horse has been a partner with man for thousands of years. He has fought wards, transported doctors to rural areas to birth babies, move ministers to spread the gospel and has provided “clean air engine power” for the growing of crops to feed mankind.

    Horses are an animal with purpose. Be it herding cattle, therapy for the disabled, addiction therapy for teens and adults and even rehab therapy for convicts. Pulling a carriage is not beneath them now matter what a social snob such as your writer presents. Horses enjoy company and interaction with people. In a sterile environment such as the cities mentioned, this “mere” horse might be the only contact with nature for a child caught in a sea of cement. Look at the joy in the eyes of the child when they breathe on and kiss the nose of the noble horse, in a harness, ready to day a days work. Urbane legends from days past while informative and amusing are not the reality of this century. The carriage horse EXTENDS the life of the steed. Watch his ears flicker as he/she takes in the sights and sounds while safely transporting humans on a tour of a concrete jungle. But then, to a condo dweller, any animal is a reminder of their failure to respect nature and appreciate it; from a loaf of bread to a BBQ on the deck . These are the haters of nature. Anything without a designer name is to be shunned and expelled. The unspoken pledge of honor from the horse is denied by those who attempt to compare it to slavery in third world countries and the subjugation of women. Poor Elizabeth must be spinning behind her computer. On Facebook she can print her little stories and not worry about the truth because those who question her and present facts are quickly banned. I wonder if HSUS and PETA still reward their writers who are published with little trips to Paradise Island, Bahamas. Bon Voyage Elizabeth….oh oh..Nassau has horse drawn carriages and even Black folks in positions of authority. What will she write about next.

  13. avatar jean says:

    some people treat horses n the most abusive way possible, these carriage horses shoudl be out of nycity. there is no need for them to have to endure the danger and bad air in nyc.

  14. avatar mickey kramer says:

    I’m looking forward to the day when this industry comes to a close on the streets of NYC. The great majority of people in surveys in the Wall St Journal , Daily News, and others (75% or more) want the industry banned, just like it’s been banned in many other cities…

  15. avatar sunnyskies says:

    Horses have been used for work since mankind was able to catch and control them. And countless numbers have lived poorly and died awful deaths as a result: on the plains, in wars fought ages ago, on city streets and country roads, hauling, in the traces. But in a real sense, the history is irrelevant. I’ve seen horses slogging along on City streets in hot weather, and cold weather, rain, wind and snow weather, lined up behind taxis and other vehicles, inhaling fumes and dirt, covered in leather, forced to walk and trot on a surface that does, documentably, ruin their legs and their feet, and their lives. That, to me, is the issue: that horses pulling carriages in cities work long hard days in unnatural, unhealthy, dangerous circumstances–and then what? I have horses, and I feel so deeply for these enslaved urban animals–they look so defeated; they look, always: tired, fearful, miserable. These things are the issue. And when finally, a person dies as a result of this cruel trade–and certainly, this will happen–then, suddenly, despite numerous horse deaths and injuries already documented, it all will matter and the trade will be ended. For so many, too little, too late. Until then, as always: all for a buck, no matter what. Politics as usual. They’re just horses, right? They can’t speak for themselves. Right? What could be easier than pretending everything is okay?

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