I have found three references now to soldiers firing their rifles after being relieved from picket or guard duty:
Also at Shiloh:
In camp near Washington:
My question is whether this was a common practice or simply a lack of discipline at Shiloh and an excuse for target practice in Bellard's regiment?
I had scarcely got out of sight of camp, when the firing toward the front, though faintly heard, seemed too steady to be caused by the pernicious habit which prevailed of the pickets firing off their guns on returning from duty, preparatory to cleaning them. - Shiloh As Seen by a Private Soldier by Warren Olney
That was not a squad of pickets emptying their guns on being relieved from duty; it was the continuous roll of thousands of muskets, and told us that a battle was on. The Story of a Common Soldier of Army Life in the Civil War, 1861-1865 by Leander Stillwell
Upon being relieved from guard in the morning, the squad was marched to the rear of the camp, to what had been at one time a mansion, but at that time nothing remained but the bare walls, upon which we practiced target shooting. Gone for a Soldier by Private Alfred Bellard
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