Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: Washington's Horse Blueskin

18th century

Washington's Horse Blueskin

In this painting of George Washington at Dorchester Heights, Washington stands beside his horse, Blueskin, with the city of Boston visible in the distant background. Continental forces occupied and fortified this position in early March 1776 in anticipation of a British assault.  Blueskin appears to be riding off as if heading into battle, but Washington confidently reigns him in. 

Detail of "George Washington at Dorchester Heights" Oil on Canvas Painting

Blueskin was one of Washington’s two primary mounts during the Revolutionary War.  The horse was a half-Arabian, sired by the stallion "Ranger,” and a gift to Washington from Colonel Benjamin Tasker Dulany. He was Washington's pre-war foxhunting mount, known for a fiery temperament and the endurance for long cross-country gallops. During the war, Washington preferred the blue roan for marches and long travel. He was a smaller horse than Nelson, Washington’s other mount, but could still easily carry the six-foot-tall Washington. 

Washington at Valley Forge bookendsWashington usually rode Nelson in battle, as the horse was less skittish around cannon fire. Yet due to Blueskin’s near white hair coat, he was the horse most often portrayed in artwork showing Washington on horseback. The artist John Trumbull depicted Blueskin beside the general in the painting Washington at Verplanck's Point (1790). Washington Before Yorktown by Rembrandt Peale shows Washington astride Blueskin, confidently leading troops into battle. Later artists, like William Ranney, took an even more dramatic and heroic approach, as seen in Washington Rallying the Americans at the Battle of Princeton, completed in 1848. 

After the Revolutionary War, Blueskin was retired to Mount Vernon and then gifted back to the Dulany family. 

Read more

The Beautiful and the Damned: Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Republic

The Beautiful and the Damned: Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Beautiful and the Damned, published in 1922 by F. Scott Fitzgerald, presents the reader with a fictionalized telling of the perpetually problematic relationship between Zelda and Frances Scott ...

Read more
Admiral Halsey: An American Naval Hero - The Great Republic
20th Century

Admiral Halsey: An American Naval Hero

During World War II, the U.S. Navy fought in every ocean of the world, but it was the war in the Pacific against the Empire of Japan that would have the greatest impact on shaping the future of the...

Read more

Blog posts

Four Military Memoirs - The Great Republic

Four Military Memoirs

These four influential military memoirs offer firsthand accounts of leadership, combat, and innovation across the two World Wars, tracing America’s rise as a global military power and the evolution...

Read more
Douglas Adams’ Highland Scenes - The Great Republic

Douglas Adams’ Highland Scenes

Douglas Adams was a celebrated late Victorian landscape and sporting artist known for dramatic Highland scenes that paired hunting, fishing, and golf with vast, atmospheric natural settings. This p...

Read more
Jefferson’s Declaration Draft, Inside a Civil War Chronicle - The Great Republic

Jefferson’s Declaration Draft, Inside a Civil War Chronicle

This week’s blog offers a rare and revealing glimpse into the creation of the Declaration of Independence through an 1866 engraving of Thomas Jefferson’s “Original Rough Draught,” complete with edi...

Read more
Back to the top