Here's one of several interesting orders I found last week while perusing the 68th and 74th Indiana regimental books at the National Archives.
Head Qurs 68th Reg. Ind. Vols.
Chattanooga May 5th 1864
Gen Order
No 5
From and after this date, the calls will be sounded as follows
Rev[eille] Daydawn.
Fatigue Call 6 30 A.M.
Sick Call 7.00 "
Drill Call 7.30 "
Recall 8.30 "
Dinner Call 12 M.
Dress Parade 5:30 "
Tattoo 7.30 "
Taps 8 "
Reveille[,] Dinner and Retreat and Tatoo calls will be sounded by the field music on Regimental parade. Fatigue[,] sick & Taps by the Bugle and 1st call for Dress Parade on the Bugle. One drummer will be detailed each day who will be in attendance at the Adjutants office from whence all signals will be sounded. All fatigue parties relieved from duty as such by 5 o'clock P.M. will appear on dress parade.
C. B. Goodwin By Order
of
Adjutant
H. J. Espy
Col 68th Ind Vols
(((((((((((((((((((((((((()))))))))))))))))))))))) )))))))
Although Taps in Chattanooga in May 1864 'might' be
"To Extinguish Lights" (see many other call schedules from Artillery, Infantry and Cavalry in 1861 - 1862 that call for Taps to be sounded by the Bugler, Bugler of the Yard, Chief Bugler....prior to Butterfields 'arrangement' (he never claimed he composed it))....based on Oliver Norton's 1892 letter my guess would be that this is in fact Butterfield's Lullaby.
Basically Norton states that the East Coast buglers were using Taps in late 1862 onward, and that when the XI and XII Corps came west to form the XX Corps and relieve the siege of Chattanooga in November 1863 they taught the 'Go To Sleep' bugle call to the Western Regiment's buglers.
Thanks for the find, Mark Jaeger!
RJ Samp
Head Qurs 68th Reg. Ind. Vols.
Chattanooga May 5th 1864
Gen Order
No 5
From and after this date, the calls will be sounded as follows
Rev[eille] Daydawn.
Fatigue Call 6 30 A.M.
Sick Call 7.00 "
Drill Call 7.30 "
Recall 8.30 "
Dinner Call 12 M.
Dress Parade 5:30 "
Tattoo 7.30 "
Taps 8 "
Reveille[,] Dinner and Retreat and Tatoo calls will be sounded by the field music on Regimental parade. Fatigue[,] sick & Taps by the Bugle and 1st call for Dress Parade on the Bugle. One drummer will be detailed each day who will be in attendance at the Adjutants office from whence all signals will be sounded. All fatigue parties relieved from duty as such by 5 o'clock P.M. will appear on dress parade.
C. B. Goodwin By Order
of
Adjutant
H. J. Espy
Col 68th Ind Vols
(((((((((((((((((((((((((()))))))))))))))))))))))) )))))))
Although Taps in Chattanooga in May 1864 'might' be
"To Extinguish Lights" (see many other call schedules from Artillery, Infantry and Cavalry in 1861 - 1862 that call for Taps to be sounded by the Bugler, Bugler of the Yard, Chief Bugler....prior to Butterfields 'arrangement' (he never claimed he composed it))....based on Oliver Norton's 1892 letter my guess would be that this is in fact Butterfield's Lullaby.
Basically Norton states that the East Coast buglers were using Taps in late 1862 onward, and that when the XI and XII Corps came west to form the XX Corps and relieve the siege of Chattanooga in November 1863 they taught the 'Go To Sleep' bugle call to the Western Regiment's buglers.
Thanks for the find, Mark Jaeger!
RJ Samp
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