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How do you dig rifle pits?

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  • How do you dig rifle pits?

    Did any of the miltary authors at the time write a description of how to construct a rifle pit correctly? Soldiers often describe the process in general terms. Rice Bull, for instance, describes loosening the soil with a bayonet and skooping it out with a frying pan, which sounds at least as do-able as digging a foxhole with an entrenching tool. How deep should a pit be dug? Does all of the dirt go in front, which he seems to imply? How big is the headlog, and should there always be one? Thanks.
    Rob Weaver
    Co I, 7th Wisconsin, the "Pine River Boys"
    "We're... Christians, what read the Bible and foller what it says about lovin' your enemies and carin' for them what despitefully use you -- that is, after you've downed 'em good and hard."
    [I]Si Klegg[/I]

  • #2
    Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

    Not sure that there is "a way" to dig entrenchments. I did a search on Google and came up with this book:



    Also, I recommend looking at CW photos of entrenchments to see what would have be "normal". Obviously, the trenches at Petersburg were not dug with a bayonet and canteen half.

    Good luck.
    Mike "Dusty" Chapman

    Member: CWT, CVBT, NTHP, MOC, KBA, Stonewall Jackson House, Mosby Heritage Foundation

    "I would have posted this on the preservation folder, but nobody reads that!" - Christopher Daley

    The AC was not started with the beginner in mind. - Jim Kindred

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

      Rifle pit digging is not an exact science. Dig a hole big enough for you and your buddy to sit in. Throw the dirt in front of the pits and toward the enemy to build up the front so you won't have to dig as deep for protection. That is the basic pit. I have seen pits big enough for 6 or 8 men or small as for two. At some point the big pits may have gotten big enough became a fort or lunette. Head logs were usually used in trenches but could have been used in a well developed riflepit. The longer you are in the pit, the more elaborate they became as time permitted improvements.

      There was a line of pits on McIlwaine Hill near Pamplin Park. The original occupants were Confederates. When the Yankees captured the pits in March of 65, they dug thier pit behind the dirt mound the original occupants made and thus faced the pits toward the CS lines. These pits lasted in this form until about 1990 or so when the steel plant was built and the whole hill was scraped out of existance.

      You can read abit about manning and placement of these pits in either "Lee's Sharpshooters" by Major Dunlop or "History of a Brigade of South Carolinians" by Caldwell. I forget which had the better description. In both books the info is in the section on Petersburg.
      Jim Mayo
      Portsmouth Rifles, Company G, 9th Va. Inf.

      CW Show and Tell Site
      http://www.angelfire.com/ma4/j_mayo/index.html

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

        From the diary of John Greenman, Lt., 8th Wisconsin Infantry in front of Spanish Fort (original in private collection):

        "After it became dark we started, and did not get far before the enemy heard us, and opened a lively fusillade. We dropped on our hands and knees, and quietly crawled along until we got near enough so that we could hear the rebel sharpshooters talking. When we halted and commenced digging holes for the rifle pits, it was very dark, yet the enemy kept up a constant volley of musketry and some of our boys were wounded and two killed before the holes were deep enough to get into, but before daylight of the 2nd the rifle pits were dug and the Boys felt safer. When it got light enough, we saw that the rebel lines were not more than 75 yards away, and then commenced the fun. We tried to drive them out of the rifle pits, and the rebs done their best to scare us out, but as it was safer in the rifle pits than anywhere else, we stayed there, and so long as we kept ourselves below the surface, we were all right, but soon as a hat, or a mans head was seen on either side, a bullet would surely strike it, and occasionally a man would be killed.

        After dark on the 2nd we worked at widening and deepening our rifle pits, and before daylight of the 3rd each pit was large enough and deep enough to allow two men to stand up in and their heads be below the surface.

        All day of the 3rd our position was shelled by the guns and mortars of the fort, and occasionally our Boys would venture a return shot from their rifles.

        On the night of the 3rd the Boys again extended the pits and joined them together making a continuous ditch, and crooked as a rail fence, and deep enough so that we could walk in the ditch, our heads below the surface. While I had a cave in one side of the ditch, where I could sit or lie down safe from the shells and bullets which rained on our position.

        On the night of the 4th some of the Boys got some logs into the ditch and cut them into short lengths then split them and fitted two ends together forming a V shape with a port hole at the point to allow the barrel of a gun to pass through and these things were then set on top of the ground as a protection for the heads of the men while firing, and finding that these made a good shelter our Boys kept up a terrible racket all day of the 5th, some of my men firing over 100 rounds each.

        On the 6th the boys dug out a large room at one side of the ditch for me and the officers in command of the other parts of the line, and that night they covered the room with logs and dirt, so that we could sit in them, and sleep there safely. The troops who were back in line, had also been digging, and had new crooked ditches from our intrenchments to connect with the rifle pits, and soon as they were finished Gen McArthur came out to where we were..."
        [FONT="Times New Roman"]David Slay, Ph.D[/FONT]
        [COLOR="Red"][FONT="Times New Roman"]Ranger, Vicksburg National Military Park[/FONT][/COLOR]

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        • #5
          Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

          You have to be careful in the way you use your terms. "Rifle Pits" were used to provide shelter for up to around 20 solidiers were "rifle trenches" could extend from 10 yards to up to 1000 yards. I cannot say for sure and believe there is no documented way on how to dig them nor what is a correct profile of a rifle pit. As the war progressed it was how these pits were combined with other types of structures which helped secure defenses. Things such as abatises and other forms of barriers provided cover as well as protection from oncoming attacks. "On the command of dig" :)

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          • #6
            Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

            I was visiting Picketts Mill a few weeks ago and was looking at a rifle pit that was still there. Obviously being over 140 years old it was well weathered and only looked like a slight depression in the ground. The diameter however was only large enough to offer protection to a couple of soldiers. From viewing it, what I envisioned was not so much of a "foxhole" or some place the soldiers could stand but a depression deep enough that they could be concealed in the prone position while having high ground over the advancing enemy. The overall diameter was in the neighborhood of about 6 to 8 feet in my estimation. Considering the hard GA clay, digging this out with a bayonet and frying pan would have been quite the task.
            Robert Collett
            8th FL / 13th IN
            Armory Guards
            WIG

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            • #7
              Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

              In my reading of letters and diaries, several years ago, I came across a soldier writing his sister descriptions of the life of a soldier. He described the process of digging rifle pits. Two men started from the middle of a 6' x 3' rectangle w/ each man throwing his dirt to the right; after about 8 layers you ended up w/ a good hole w/ enough dirt on either side to both conceal & protect. The final bit of digging was the creation of the fire steps & the cutting of firing notches in the dirt pile. Cut brush was used to form an arbor of sorts to protect a man and his comrade from the sun w/ the supports for the arbor also forming the supports for the headlog. He viewed it as a hole that made him all but imprevious to the effects of shot and shell. IIRC the man died in the fighting around Atlanta.

              I may not quite be recalling the reference accurately but I have constructed such a pit several times; two men takes about 3 liesurely hours for a good strong hole in the ground and the steps allow one to easily reload. I rather suspect it could be accomplished rather quicker if the situation warrented it. What I found uncomfortable was how much like a grave it looked... he also mentioned an "arrow shaped" pit; but I didn't quite follow his description.
              Johan Steele aka Shane Christen C Co, 3rd MN VI
              SUVCW Camp 48
              American Legion Post 352
              [url]http://civilwartalk.com[/url]

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              • #8
                Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                "Hard Tack And Coffee" shows a few examples.


                Your ob't servant....
                Your humble servant....
                Sean Collicott
                [URL="www.sallyportmess.itgo.com"]Sally Port Mess[/URL]
                [URL="http://oldnorthwestvols.org/onv/index.php"]Old Northwest Volunteers[/URL]

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                • #9
                  Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                  Thanks. The quotes and observations offered have confirmed a couple of suspicions that I've had. 1) That as positions, they were fairly shallow and temporary and 2) don't seem to have been dug according to some military "standard dimension." In these respects, Civil War rifle pits differ even from the modern "hasty fighting position," which is, I guess, the image I'm having trouble getting out of my head. I really like that quote because it shows the development of the position into a full-fledged entrenchment. I recall looking at the rifle pits on top of Reno Hill and thinking that those were extremely shallow, even when they were freshly dug. Loading and firing a breechloader in those conditions would be relatively easy, but loading a muzzleloader under similar conditions must have been truly trying.
                  Rob Weaver
                  Co I, 7th Wisconsin, the "Pine River Boys"
                  "We're... Christians, what read the Bible and foller what it says about lovin' your enemies and carin' for them what despitefully use you -- that is, after you've downed 'em good and hard."
                  [I]Si Klegg[/I]

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                    If there was no standard, consider the factors that would inspire the digging of a rifle pit:
                    ground conditions: hard? sandy? mud?
                    amount of fire coming toward the unit involved
                    obviously, length of time available
                    anything handy that could be used: logs, stones, etc.
                    availability of shell craters (!) I have not found any diaries, etc. that reflect the use of craters in Civil War entrenchments, although such use appears to have been very common and well documented in World War II (Bill Mauldin's The Brass Ring, William Manchester's Goodbye Darkness, etc.)

                    I have seen the remains of original pits on several battlefields and can't say that there was a standard. Especially in the early war period, I suspect, but cannot prove, that getting behind something in a hurry superseded the manuals.

                    If you look at the LOC's 1863 pictures of Marye's Heights, when the impressions should have been fairly clear, some of the "pits" just below the (I have lost the house's name) House look more like what you could scrape out from under yourself in a hurry, possibly while you were lying down, while others are a body-shaped digging that appears to be at least two feet deep with the excavated dirt banked up to provide front cover. Since the Confederates were in place for months, pure speculation would suggest that the shallow pits were dug during the heat of one of the battles, while the better ones were put up when there was more time.
                    Becky Morgan

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                    • #11
                      Shell craters

                      I have not found any diaries, etc. that reflect the use of craters in Civil War entrenchments, although such use appears to have been very common and well documented in World War II

                      The reason that pits were not made from shell craters in the CW was due to the type of and size of artillery used. Except for seige operations, field guns used ammunition which unless solid, was designed to be exploded in the air above the soldiers. There were shells with concussion fuses but field artillery was too small and black powder too weak to leave the big craters that WWI and WWII high explosive artillery left. It is not uncommon to dig a CW ground burst and usually most of the fragments will be within a foot or two of each other. Not much exploding power in these type shells.

                      Bigger guns such as ship's guns or 100 & 200 lb parrott rifles could likely make a big crater if a shell dropped down with enough momentum to bury in the ground. There are not many areas where these types of shells were used against infantry but along the James River they were worrisom.

                      The CS section of the Howlett line adjoining the James River was inspected shortly after positions were established by the respective armies. I forgot what general did the inspection but the result was a significant strengthing of the line in areas where the Union gunboats or Federal river forts could shell the lines. The general was worried that a large artillery shell from these type guns could punch through field fortifications and would probably be capable of making a man size crater taking most of the breast work with it. Some of these strengthened lines are still surviving and are about 10 or 12 feet wide across the top of the works. (Parkers Battery by Krick)
                      Jim Mayo

                      Portsmouth Rifles, 9th Va. Inf.
                      http://www.angelfire.com/ma4/j_mayo/9va/rifles1.html

                      CW show & tell.
                      http://www.angelfire.com/ma4/j_mayo/index.html

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Shell craters

                        Ah, that makes sense. I tend to think in terms of the holes punched by big (and modern) siege guns. I also forgot one of the prime pieces of real estate for those under fire: the hollow left by the root ball of a fallen tree.

                        One of my favorite parts of the New Market museum is the letter from one of the cadets. He said he tried to use a sapling about two inches across as cover and allowed as he'd have used a blade of grass if he could have sheltered in it. Mind you, by all accounts he performed very well during the battle. A sensible soldier takes any cover he or she can use to stay alive and stay in the fight.
                        Becky Morgan

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                        • #13
                          Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                          As pointed out the digging of the pit was based on materials on hand and the tools available.

                          Based on a number of descriptions in books it seems that the soldiers tried to limit the 'digging' involved in favor of raising a parapit. They talk about putting down logs or stumps and then throwing the dirt dug on their side of the barricade on top of the debris to raise the height of the parapit. I just finished reading an article where some of the 'pits' dug in the Chancelorville campaign were are shallow as two feet but the use of logs, etc allowed the parapit to be raised to about 4-5 feet.

                          It a;so seemed that officers tried to layout thier defensive positions with the lay of the land in mind to he might have taken advantage of any dips, sunken roads (sound familiar), etc. to get a head start on the defenses.

                          So I don't think there was an 'official' army way to construct the defenses.
                          Bob Sandusky
                          Co C 125th NYSVI
                          Esperance, NY

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                            Mr. Mayo is correct as usual. The only shell holes that I personally know of from the period are overshots in the woods behind Ft Anderson and those in front of the works at Sugar Loaf. When looking at the heavy guns assigned to target those works it's no surprise a shallow scar is left today.

                            The rifle pits at Sugar Loaf are evenly spaced rectangular features while the adjacent shell bursts can best be described as rambling dimples. The pits there and at the Tolar Farm at Bentonville are well laid, uniform parts of the defences.
                            John-Owen Kline

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                            • #15
                              Re: How do you dig rifle pits?

                              The CRRC2 has an entire chapter in it about earthworks--how they were built, by whom, how they were laid out, by whom, and more. I'll provide one short excerpt from that chapter here, specific to rifle pits:

                              Some common—but by no means only—features in a Civil War fieldworks system included:
                              1. Rifle Pits: Civil War rifle pits varied in size, from what we might today call a “foxhole” to “complete” fieldworks. Strictly speaking, rifle pits were advanced fieldworks, usually meant for pickets, ranging from a hole sufficient for only two or three men, to earthworks fifty yards or more in length. Sometimes rifle pits were so extensive that, when overrun by attackers, they were mistaken for the enemy’s main line. Rifle pits were usually hundreds of yards in front of the main line; however, even at Cold Harbor—where portions of the opposing main works were as close together as 200 yards—there were still rifle pits in no-man’s-land, albeit fairly near the main lines.


                              See the rest of the chapter for more info on Civil War field fortification systems. :)

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