Re: Carrying The Rifle At Sling Arms
It could shoot into the ground but also could shoot your file mate in the leg or foot. Honestly in a situation that required a musket to be carried loaded, I find it hard to believe that a soldier would be carrying it in a relaxed position such as sling arms. Then again the picket line can be such a relaxing place.
In my previous post I'm sorry if I sounded as if I was scolding Mr. Hicks. That was not my intention. Instead I was trying to express that an incompetent officer is just as historically correct as a competent one. Though we as living historians feel jipped and jived when we are commanded by someone who has not done their proper homework, in my opinion, we are glancing over a very relevant historical situation. I do realize the amount of work we all put into our impressions and I do feel jipped when an officer is lack luster. But he is the officer non the less and it is his company to command as he see's fit.
Finally, It is true "There's no God given right to command", but the captain or lieutenant that looks down the company line and makes a choice that the muskets that are slung should be un-slung, should count more as an order from an officer, not as a gross offense against the manual. Officers make mistakes now just as they did then, take a breath
It could shoot into the ground but also could shoot your file mate in the leg or foot. Honestly in a situation that required a musket to be carried loaded, I find it hard to believe that a soldier would be carrying it in a relaxed position such as sling arms. Then again the picket line can be such a relaxing place.
In my previous post I'm sorry if I sounded as if I was scolding Mr. Hicks. That was not my intention. Instead I was trying to express that an incompetent officer is just as historically correct as a competent one. Though we as living historians feel jipped and jived when we are commanded by someone who has not done their proper homework, in my opinion, we are glancing over a very relevant historical situation. I do realize the amount of work we all put into our impressions and I do feel jipped when an officer is lack luster. But he is the officer non the less and it is his company to command as he see's fit.
Finally, It is true "There's no God given right to command", but the captain or lieutenant that looks down the company line and makes a choice that the muskets that are slung should be un-slung, should count more as an order from an officer, not as a gross offense against the manual. Officers make mistakes now just as they did then, take a breath
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