In 1917, at Passchendaele, Captain Jack Seely’s horse, Warrior, stumbled into a shell crater and became trapped in mud and barbed wire. Under heavy fire, Jack refused to abandon him. For forty-five minutes, he cut wire, dug with his hands, and spoke gently to calm the panicked horse.
Warrior, who had carried Jack through countless battles, trusted him completely—and Jack trusted him in return. Against all odds, they both survived.
Warrior became one of only 62,000 horses to return home from the one million Britain sent to the war. He lived out his days in comfort and was buried at Jack Seely’s estate, near where Jack himself requested to be laid to rest.
True bravery, Jack wrote, is not just survival—it is compassion for those who lay down their lives for us.
From this Story Spielberg directed "War Horse," It was later made into a stage show.